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4 



VOYAGES 

OF 

A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR 

OF THE DAYS THAT ARE PAST 



COMPILED FROM THE JOURNALS AND LETTERS 

OF THE liATE 

KICHAED J. CLEVELAND 






BY 

H. W. S. CLEVELAND 



NEW YORK 

HARPEPw & BROTHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE 

1886 



Copyright, 1886, by Harper & Brothers. 



All riglUs reserved. 



PEEFACE. 



Those who have got beyond the childish belief 
that happiness is the end and aim of existence, 
and is actually attainable in this stage of it — who 
have learned by the discipline of adversity and 
disappointment that the grand object of life is the 
development of character, while happiness is only 
the occasional, incidental attendant on its pursuit 
—will read the following story with an appreciative 
interest which only such education can afford. 

H. W. S. C. 



L. 



CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER I. 
Salem, the Part she Took in the Ee volution. — Stephen Cleveland. — 
Commercial Activity Succeeding the Revolution, and its Effect 
on the Character of the Community Page 1 

CHAPTER II. 

Early Years.— Cultivation of Commercial Tastes.— First Voyage. — 
Voyage with Captain Silsbee. — Letters to his Father.— Voyage 
from Havre to Cape of Good Hope.— Interest Excited by his Ar- 
rival ... . 13 

CHAPTER III. 

Voyage from China to the Northwest Coast of America.— Letters 
from Canton. — Difficulties of the Undertaking. — Hardships of 
the Voyage.— Mutiny of the Men. — Adventures on the Coast. — 
Safe Return to Canton 34 

CHAPTER IV. 

From Canton to Calcutta, and thence to the Isle of France. — First 
Meeting with William Shaler. — From the Isle of France to Co- 
penhagen. — Purchase of the Brig Leila Byrd, and Preparations 
for a Voyage Round the World.— The Count de Rouissillon. 57 

CHAPTER V. 

Voyage of the Lelia Byrd. — Adventures in Chili and on the Coast 
of California. — Thence to the Sandwich Islands and China, and 
thence in the Alert to Boston 76 



II 



viii CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER YI. 

Marriage and Settlement at Lancaster, Massachusetts. — Forced to 
Resume Navigation. — Yoj^age of the Aspasia, and its Ruinous 
Termination Page 101 

CHAPTER Vn. 

The Embargo. — Yoyage to Africa. — Goes to England in Search of 
Business. — Thence, Secretly, to Holland, and Home as Bearer of 
Despatches. — Yoyage to Naples. — ^Yessel and Cargo Seized and 
Confiscated.-— Life at Naples and Rome 125 

CHAPTER YHI. 
From Italy to Lisbon and thence to England 142 

CHAPTER IX. 

Transactions in England and on the Continent. — A Project Prom- 
ising Great Results Defeated by the Failure of the Russian 
Campaign 153 

CHAPTER X. 

Sails in the Ship Beaver from New York for the West Coast of 
South America. — Seized at Talcahuana. — Plots to Take the 
Spanish Frigate Yenganza, — Seized with Fever. — Is Sent to 
Lima in the Brig Canton 167 

CHAPTER XL 

Letters to the Yiceroy and to Mr. Astor. — Arrival at Lima. — Recep- 
tion by the Yiceroy.— Goes to Yalparaiso on a Secret Mission. 
— The Beaver Restored. — Captain Biddle Supplies a First 
Officer 184 

CHAPTER XXI. 
Operations on the Coast of Peru. — Proclamation of Blockade, which 
he Sets at Defiance with Entire Success, — Satisfaction of the 
Yiceroy. — Sails for Rio Janeiro. 199 



CONTENTS. ix 



CHAPTER XIII. 

Recapitulation of the Occurrences of Three Years.— Letter from the 
Underwriters, and his Reply.— Home Again.— Disgraceful Con- 
duct of the National Insurance Company .Page 213 

CHAPTER XIY. 

Failure to Secure the Proceeds of his Adventures. — Pursuit of 
Arizmendi to Hamburg, and subsequently to Madrid. — Mr. 
Shaler Appointed Consul at Havana. — My Father Goes with 
him as Yice-Consul. — Death of Mr. Shaler. — Obtains an OflSce 
in Boston Custom-House. — Takes up his Residence with me, and 

Dies in my House at the Age of Eightj^-seven 226 

A* 



VOYAGES 



OF 



A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR 

OF THE DAYS THAT ARE PAST. 



CHAPTER I. 



Salem, the Part she took in the Revolution.— Stephen Cleveland. — 
Commercial Activity Succeeding the Revolution, and its Effect 
on the Character of the Community. 

The names of many of the cities and towns of the 
old world are associated in the mind with conceptions 
of character ahnost as vivid as those which attach to in- 
dividual persons. 

We think of some as centres of intellectual or artistic 
culture. Others are invested with an odor of sanctity, 
or call to mind visions of decayed grandeur, or an un- 
defined sense of weird and ghostly superstitions. A 
sort of moral atmosphere seems to hang over them, 
which imparts its hue to every object or incident per- 
taining to them. Such associations are naturally less 
frequent and less palpable with us, and yet Ave have 
many towns which have attained such reputation for 
1 



2 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

peculiar qualities, resulting from circumstances of past 
history, that we speak of events which transpire within 
their borders as being characteristic of the place, just as 
we should of any person whose idiosyncrasies were well 
known, and we instantly recognize the effect of these 
peculiar characteristics in the action of individual mem- 
bers of the community. 

There is, perhaps, no town on this continent whose 
name carries w^ith it such distinctly marked associations 
of this kind as Salem, Massachusetts. There is certainly 
none which sustained a more important part in the early 
history of the country, and none which has retained so 
many outward evidences of its former character. 

The stranger who wanders to-day through the quiet 
streets of Salem, or lingers about her deserted wharves, 
is impressed witli the Sabbath-like stillness which per- 
vades them, and the vague sense of departed vitality 
with which they are invested. Old-fashioned homes 
of spacious size, whose walls in long -past days have 
echoed the greetings of old-fashioned hospitality, stand 
apart in the shade of patriarchal elms or lindens, and 
seem to plead with mute eloquence against the inno- 
vation of modern improvements. Great warehouses 
stand, empty and silent, on the vacant wharves which 
once resounded with the notes of busy commerce. In 
my younger days a peculiar feature of the streets was 
the frequent presence at the corners of an old cannon, 
made to do duty as a corner-post. It had a picturesque 
effect, and was so suggestive of past history that I can- 
not but regret the lack of taste which suffered them to 
be removed. They were most frequently to be seen inl 



OLD SALEM. 3 

the streets nearest the wharves, which were then lined 
with ship-chandler's shops, sailors' boarding-houses, slop- 
shops, etc., and were filled with the motley crowed of 
sailors,, longshoremen, and the various amphibious bi- 
peds inherent to such places. All these have long since 
disappeared, like frogs and tadpoles from a drained 
marsh, and no sight, sound, or odor remains that is sug- 
gestive of marine or commercial life. 

There are, however, no signs of the poverty we are 
accustomed to associate with decay. The evidences of 
wealth and refined culture are obvious, and an aspect 
of comfort and respectability is seen even in the plain- 
est dwellings, while the tidy cleanliness w^hich every- 
wliere prevails affords no suggestion of squalor or want. 
But the sources of prosperity are not perceptible. The 
machinery of life is out of sight and hearing, and the 
man whose interest in life is dependent on the ceaseless 
activity which is the characteristic of our new and grow- 
ing towns is apt to turn with a sneer of contempt from 
a place which seems so dead to everything like active 
enterprise. 

Yet the present serene and quiet condition of Salem 
is the final result — the " ripening off," after fermenta- 
tion — of sncli elements of activity and enterprise as have 
never been surpassed, and have exerted so important an 
influence on the destinies of the country that they should 
not be forgotten. 

The part which Salem played in the great drama of 
the revolution w^as unique, and constituted a vitally 
important factor in the sum of events w^hich led to the 
final consummation. 



4 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

It should be borne in mind that we entered npon that 
contest with the first naval power in the world without 
a single ship of war ; with our commerce ruined, and 
the ports of Boston and New York in the hands of the 
enemy, a fate soon after shared by Newport, Philadel- 
phia, Savannah, and Charleston. Salem saw her oppor- 
tunity and proved herself equal to its demands. She 
turned her vessels into men-of-war, armed and manned 
them, and sent them out to prey on British commerce. 
During the war upwards of one hundred and fifty ves- 
sels, carrying more than two thousand guns, w^ere sent 
out of her port, and more than four hundred and fifty 
prizes were captured and sent in by them. They cruised 
in the English and Irish channels and the Bay of Bis- 
cay ; they brouglit arms and munitions of war from 
France and the French islands; they intercepted the 
transport sliips bringing reinforcements and supplies 
from England to the troops in Boston and New York ; 
they raised the rate of insurance on British ships to 
twenty-three per cent., and compelled England to em- 
ploy her navy in convoying merchantmen, and in re- 
peated instances achieved success by the most desperate 
feats of valor. 

A very active part in the promotion of this service 
was taken by my grandfather, Stephen Cleveland, a 
sketch of whose career will serve as an appropriate in- 
troduction to the adventures of his eldest son, my father. 

In the year 1756, w^hen he was but sixteen years old, 
he was seized by a press-gang in the streets of Boston, 
and served for several years on board an English frigate. 
She was first under the command of a very gentlemanly 



I 



STEPHEN CLEVELAND. 5 

officer, who was beloved by his crew, and who after- 
wards became Sir William Trelawney, Governor of Ja- 
maica. 

lie was succeeded by a contemptible dandy, who, 
among other acts which excited the ire of his crew, used 
to go at night in disguise between decks to overhear 
their remarks upon himself. On one occasion he was 
recognized by one of the men by the dim light of a 
lantern, and, springing from his hammock and calling 
him by the name of one of his sliipmates with whom 
he pretended to have had a difficulty, he gave him such 
a thrashing that he kept his bed for a fortnight, and 
was, of course, ashamed to make known the cause of his 
sudden illness. 

My grandfather's service in the British navy was dur- 
ing the " old French war," and the ship to which he 
was attached was for a time one of a squadron watching 
a French fleet in one of the Channel ports. He was 
promoted to be captain of the foretop, and afterwards 
midshipman. After his discharge and return home he 
entered the merchant service, and became not only an 
accomplished seaman, but, as I have often heard my fa- 
tlier say, he seemed to have an intuitive skill in naval 
architecture, and a better knowledge of proportions in 
the building, sparring, and rigging of ships than any 
man he ever knew. 

This knowledge was turned to account in a most effi- 
cient manner in the service of Iiis country in her most 
trying days. His advice and assistance were in con- 
stant demand for the construction and fitting-out of the 
privateers. 



6 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

The brig Pilgrim was built under liis sole direction, 
and proved one of the fastest as well as most successful 
of the whole Salem fleet. She captured and sent in 
more than fifty prizes, and was finally run ashore on 
Cape Cod to escape capture by the Chatham^ a frigate 
of sixty guns. 

He w^as finally commissioned by the Continental gov- 
ernment, and sent to Bordeaux in command of the brig 
Despatch^ to procure arms and military stores. 

The date of his commission is August 8, 1776, only 
thirty-five days after the Declaration of Independence, 
so that it must have been one of the earliest naval com- 
missions issued by the Continental government. It is 
signed by John Hancock, and w\as accompanied by a 
minute letter of instructions from a committee of Con- 
gress, of which Benjamin Franklin was chairman. He 
was the first to display the American fiag on a govern- 
ment vessel in a European port, and was much feted 
and caressed during his stay in Bordeaux. 

A curious illustration of the necessities to which the 
country was reduced is afforded by the fact that, as we 
had then neither money nor credit, he carried out a cargo 
of oil, fish, and potash, and made his purchases with the 
proceeds. He accomplished his object successfully, af- 
ter two narrow escapes from capture on his return. 

The spirit of active enterprise engendered by the war 
found vent, when peace returned, in the opening of new 
channels of commerce. The merchants of Salem then 
found themselves in possession of a fieet of vessels which 
had been built expressly for privateers, and were much 
too large for the short voyages to which they had hereto- 



COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY OF SALEM. 7 

fore been restricted, and they entered at once upon the 
commercial career of which, for a period of forty years, 
they held the monopoly. The effect of this active rival- 
ry upon the social character of the town was so marked, 
and is so pertinent to my present subject, that I feel 
warranted in quoting the following from a very inter- 
esting paper prepared by the Eev. George Bachelor : 

**The foreign commerce which sprang up in the last century in 
Salem was the cause of a wonderful intellectual and moral stimulus, 
not yet spent. After a century of comparative quiet, the citizens of 
this little town were suddenly dispersed to every part of the Oriental 
world, and to every nook of barbarism which had a market and a 
shore. The borders of the commercial world received sudden en- 
largement, and the boundaries of the intellectual world underwent 
a similar expansion. This reward of enterprise might be the dis- 
covery of an island in which wild pepper enough to load a ship 
might be had almost for the asking, or of forests where precious 
gums had no commercial value, or spice islands, unvisited and un- 
vexed by civilization. Every shipmaster and every mariner return- 
ing on a richly loaded ship was the owner of valuable knowledge. In 
those days crews were made up of Salem boys, every one of whom 
expected to become an East India merchant. When a captain w^as 
asked at Manilla how he contrived to find his way in the teeth of a 
northeast monsoon by mere dead-reckoning, he replied that he had 
a crew of twelve men, any one of whom could take and work a 
lunar observation as well, for all practical purposes, as Sir Isaac 
Kewton himself. 

* ' This crew had in ITathaniel Bowditch an uncommon supercargo. 
But it would be difficult now to find a crew of common sailors who, 
even uader such a teacher, would willingly master the mysteries of 
tangents and secants, dip and refraction, sines and cosines. 

''When, in 1816, George Crowninshield coasted the Mediterranean 
in the GleopatrcCs Barge, a magnificent yacht of one hundred and 
ninety-seven tons, which excited the w^onder even of the Genoese, 
the black cook, who had once sailed with Bowditch, was found to 
be as competent to keep a ship's reckoning as any of the officers. 



8 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

" Eival merchants sometimes drove the work of preparation night 
and day, when virgin markets had favors to be won, and ships which 
set out for unknown ports were watched when they slipped their 
cables and sailed away by night, and dogged for months on the high 
seas, in the hope of discovering the secret, well kept by owner and 
crew. Every man on board was allowed a certain space for his own 
little venture. People in other pursuits, not excepting the mer- 
chant's minister, intrusted their savings to the supercargo, and 
watched eagerly the result of their adventure. This great mental 
activity, the profuse stores of knowledge brought by every ship's 
crew and distributed, together with India shawls, blue china, and 
unheard-of curiosities from every savage shore, gave the community 
a rare alertness of intellect." 

Salem ships led the way round the Cape of Good 
Hope to the Isle of France, India, and China. They 
were the first to display the American flag and open 
trade at Calcutta, Bombay, Sumatra, Zanzibar, Mada- 
gascar, Australia, Batavia, Mocha, and St. Petersburg. 
The adventures of her brave mariners in unknown seas, 
their encounters with pirates and savage tribes, their hair- 
breadth escapes, their tales of imprisonment and suffer- 
ing in the prisons of France, Spain, and South America, 
would make a story which could not be surpassed in ro- 
mantic and pathetic interest. The adventures described 
in the following pages may serve as a sample in proof 
of the above assertion. They afford an illustration of 
the effect of such experiences in giving a marked char- 
acter to a community of which the hero is a type. 
^ His own " Narrative of Voyages and Commercial En- 
terprises" was published in Boston in 1842, and went 
through three editions in this country, and was repub- 
lished in England. It was reviewed in all the leading 
periodicals of both countries in terms of the highest 



"CLEVELAND'S NARRATIVE." 9 

commendation, not only of the intrinsic interest of the 
adventures described, but of the beauty of tlie style, 
which was compared with that of Defoe. It has long 
been out of print, however ; and, although it may be 
found in many of the principal libraries of the country, 
and no one can read it without acknowledging its ab- 
sorbing interest, very few of the present generation of 
readers are aware of its existence. -^ 

'It is obvious, however, that a narrative partaking so 
much of the nature of an autobiography must necessa- 
rily be devoid of the personal details which are often 
essential features in such a story when told by another, 
while the fact that, at the time of its publication, many 
of those with whom the author had been associated 
were still living, precluded many alhisions to persons 
and events which would greatly enhance the interest 
of the story. . These obstacles have been removed by 
the lapse of time. None of his contemporaries are left, 
and those w^ho knew and loved him in his old age, 
when they themselves were young, are now far ad- 
vanced in life. No one is now living who will be af- 
fected by the mention of names which it would then 
have been indelicate to make public, and no injury can 
now accrue from laying bare the secret springs of ac- 
tions which it was then inexpedient to expose. Above 
all, the personal character of the chief actor may now, 
with propriety, be made the object of central interest, 
and the traits which win the affection may be shown to 
have formed quite as important an element of its com- 
position as those which excite only admiration. 

The materials for such illustration are in my posses- 
1^ 



10 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

sion in the form of journals and letters, wliicli often re- 
veal such a personal connection with the incidents of the 
narrative as adds very greatly to their interest. 

Abundant material for further elucidation of the sub- 
ject might be drawn from the archives of the Essex 
Institute, and the wonderful collection of interesting 
objects in the museum of the Salem East India Marine 
Society would furnish means of elaborate illustration 
from every quarter, and especially from the least-knoWn 
regions, of the globe. 

Having given this account of my father's father, it is 
fitting that I should add that his w^ife— my grandmother 
— was Margaret Jefiry, one of a highly respectable 
family^ of whom no representative is left in Salem, 
though the name is preserved in connection with a 
court runnino^ out of Wasliino;ton Street, which was 
part of the garden in the rear of the family residence, 
on Essex Street, opposite the First Church. A quaint, 
but beautiful, miniature in my possession justifies the 
description given of her as a very charming and attrac- 
tive woman ; and her death, in 1784, at the age of thirtj'- 
seven, so preyed upon her husband that it seemed to in- 
capacitate him from further exertion. My father alludes 
most feelingly to this event in a letter written to me 
late in life, soon after the publication of his narrative. 
In reply to some remarks of mine on the trials and dis- 
appointments therein detailed, he says: 

** These were as dust in the balance compared to the affliction I 
was early called upon to suffer. I allude to my dear mother's death 
when I had only reached my tenth year, just the period when I had 
sufficient reflection to be sensible of our loss; just the season when 



EARLY AFFLICTION. 11 

the sensibility is most delicately acute. All the circumstances con- 
nected with this gloomy period are so profoundly engraven on my 
memory as never to be obliterated. I suppose it was known to her 
attendants that my mother could not recover, but I was unconscious 
of it, when, on an evening, between daylight and dark, as my brother 
William and I were playing at ball in the yard, my aunt Nancy came 
to the door and said, ' Come in, boys, your mother is dying.' Words 
are inadequate to convey an idea of the anguish I suffered on this 
announcement. Scarcely had the excess of grief a little subsided, 
when it was renewed by the dismal business of the funeral obsequies. 
Dr. Prince, while praying, was so overcome by his emotions that it 
was with difficulty he succeeded in finishing the prayer. It was 
customary in those days for the body to be carried on the shoulders 
of men, and six or eight pall-holders to walk on each side the coffin, 
the mourners being arranged in the procession in accordance with 
the degree of alliance to the deceased. Of course, my poor father, 
who was almost distracted, walked first, and his two eldest sons 
next. Arrived at the grave, as if these circumstances were not al- 
ready sufficiently harrowing, it was necessary to wait near it till the 
coffin was deposited and some gravel thrown upon it. At the mo- 
ment this gravel rattled upon the coffin my father uttered a groan 
which, it appears to me, I can hear even now. For many weeks af- 
ter this sad scene I never slept till I had wet my pillow with my tears. 
For many months after, a mark on my handkerchief, a patch on my 
clothes, the frill of my shirt, anything of the handiwork of my dear 
mother, would awaken the sense of my loss; and for years after- 
wards I never heard the bell of the First Church toll without its 
bringing the sad scene before me. During many weeks after the 
funeral my father shut himself up, and would see nobody except his 
children; and this, as was natural, had a tendency to increase my 
grief." 

The despondency which resulted from the death of 
his wife was so great that my grandfather never recov- 
ered from its effects. His property, as a consequence, 
became so reduced that the necessity of providing for 
him was a chief incentive to my father's early eflEorts to 



12 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

secure an independence. The urgent tones in whicli — 
as will be seen — he entreats his father, in his letters, to 
make use of his means or credit without reserve or hesi- 
tation, afford sufficient evidence of his filial affection 
and his generous nature. 

Note, — The preceding chapter was written some years sinoe, and, 
of course, before the name of Grover Cleveland had been suggested 
for the high office to which he has since been elected. As the ele- 
ments of sterling integrity and unflinching courage which have 
marked his administration were no less conspicuous in the char- 
acter of the hero of the following story, the fact will possess inter- 
est, especially to those who have faith in the law of heredity, that 
the great-grandfather of the President, the Rev. Aaron Cleveland 
of Norwich, Conn., was the brother of my grandfather, Stephen 
Cleveland, of whom I have given the above account. 

Chicago, Dec, 1885. 



CHAPTER II. 

Early Years.— Cultivation of Commercial Tastes. — First Yoyage.— 
Yoyage with Captain Silsbee. — Letters to his Father. — Yoyage 
from Havre to Cape of Good Hope. — Interest Excited by his Ar- 
rival. 

My fatlier, Richard Jeffry Cleveland, the eldest child 
of Stephen and Margaret Jeffry Cleveland, was born in 
Salem, Dec. 19, 1773. lie had three brothers younger 
than himself, two of whom — William and George — 
were for many years merchant navigators in the East 
India trade frorn that port. They afterwards held, in 
succession, the office of president of the Commercial 
Insurance Company, and George was also president of 
the East India Marine Society, a charitable association 
composed of navigators engaged in that trade. It is 
simply a just tribute to their memory to say that no 
men ever stood higher in the estimation of tlieir fellow- 
citizens, or were regarded with warmer feelings of af- 
fection by those who knew them best, than these two 
brothers. ■ At tlie age of fourteen my f atlier entered the \ 
counting-house of Elias Ilasket Derby, where he re- 
mained four years, and acquired not only the merely 
technical elements of mercantile education, but an accu- 
rate knowledge and love of naval affairs, and a taste for 
commercial adventure. This last was wisely fostered 
by Mr. Derby, who allowed his employees to become in- 



14 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

terested in the voyages of his ships by sending small 
adventures on their own account. Even the seamen 
were each allowed a privilege of eight hundred pounds 
freight, and the officers a proportionally larger amount. 
The building and despatching of ships to different quar- 
ters of the globe was so constantly in progress that it 
afforded the best possible opportunity for studying and 
comparing their relative qualities, while the interest in 
their performance and in the results of their voyages 
w^as sustained by daily conversation and discussion, in 
which every participant had a personal stake. Indeed, 
his love for the sea may be traced to a yet earlier stage, 
as he has told me that his favorite sport w^hen a boy was 
sailing about Salem harbor in a leaky boat, which he 
hired at sixpence a week. 

When only eighteen he went on his first voyage, im- 
pelled thereto by the wish to provide for his father, and 
the earliest of his letters in my possession, written to 
Iiis father from the Cape of Good Hope, April 20, 
1792, contains these words, which every father will ap- 
preciate : 

"I long to hear how your lawsuit is settled, the event of which 
causes me much anxiety ; but, if you should lose it, it must be a con- 
solation to you that your children are ambitious boys, who, with 
such an education as is to be had in the public schools of Salem, can 
soon provide for themselves and their father also; and I am sure you 
cannot doubt the pleasure it would give us; but God forbid you 
should ever be in such circumstances as to want it." 

His earliest voyages were made in the capacity of 
captain's clerk, under the command of Nathaniel Silsbee, 
w^ho had been his fellow-clerk in Mr. Derby's counting- 
room, and was subsequently, for many years, senator 



FIRST VOYAGES. 15 

from Massachusetts. Ho was but little older than my 
father, and their friendship was of lifelong duration. 
Of one of these voyages, of nineteen months' duration, 
to the Cape of Good Hope and the Isles of France and 
Bourbon, at a time when the wars of the great powers 
of Europe rendered navigation precarious, and often de- 
manded the skill of the diplomatist as well as that of the 
mariner, he says, at its conclusion, 

** The voyage, thus happily accomplished, may be regarded, when 
taken in all its bearings, as a very remarkable one; first, from the 
extreme youth of all to whom its management had been intrusted — 
Captain Silsbee was not twenty years old; the chief mate, Charles 
Derby, was but nineteen ; and the second mate, who was discharged 
at the Isle of France, and whose place I subsequently filled, was but 
twenty-four. Secondly, from the foresight, ingenuity, and adroit- 
ness manifested in averting and escaping dangers; in perceiving ad- 
vantages, and turning them to the best account; and, thirdly, from 
the great success attending this judicious management, as demon- 
strated by the fact of returning to the owner four or five times the 
amount of the original capital. Mr. Derby used to call us his boys, 
and boast of our achievements ; and well might he do so, for it is not 
probable that the annals of the world can furnish another example 
of an enterprise of such magnitude, requiring the exercise of so 
much judgment and skill, being conducted by so young a man, aided 
only by still younger advisers, and accomplished with the most en- 
tire success." 

His letters to his father, in all his early voyages, give 
evidence of such self-confident ambition as is essential 
to success, and show, at the same time, tliat he was actu- 
ated only by generous motives. The following passages, 
taken from different letters, between the years 1795 and 
1797, are of this character : 

*'If I go only short voyages, you may depend upon as large a re- 
mittance as I can possibly make, at least once a year, and I hope I 



16 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

shall soon have it in my power to supply you bountifully, which is 
my only ambition." 

'*I enclose bills of exchange for £180 sterling ($900), and I hope 
you will not hesitate to take up money on my account, for be as- 
sured, while I possess one dollar, three fourths of it shall be at your 
service." 

In 1797, having made one previous voyage in com- 
mand of the bark Enterjprise^ belonging to E. H. 
Derby, Jr., he saited again in tlie same vessel for Eu- 
rope, whence, after disposing of his cargo, he was to 
go to Mocha for a cargo of coffee ; and was anticipat- 
ing, with satisfaction, the prospect of being the first to 
display the American flag in that port. He was pro- 
portionately disappointed when, soon after his arrival 
at Havre, he received notice that circumstances ren- 
dered it necessary to abandon the voyage, and return 
the property to the owner, with as little delay as pos- 
sible. Knowing that his return home would involve 
the loss of a good deal of time before he could hope to 
be again employed — owing to the general stagnation of 
business — he sent the ship home under the charge of 
the mate, and began, at Havre, the first of the daring 
enterprises which he subsequently followed up with 
such marked success. 

The danger they involved was not encountered as an 
act of bravado. They had always an object which he 
deemed worthy of the risk, and that object was success- 
fully accomplished. 

The following letter contains the first intimation of 
his intention. At the time it was written he was three 
months short of twenty-four years of age : 



LETTER TO HIS FATHER. 17 

*' Havre, Septemler 19, 1797. 

''When I was upon the point of embarking for home, and, in 
imagination, was shaking hands with my friends, an unexpected 
offer, upon advantageous terms, of such a vessel as I have been 
looking out for, determined me to alter my course, and add a few 
months to the many I have already been absent, concluding that if 
I came home from hence I must unavoidably (in the present state 
of affairs) remain at least six or eight months unemployed, which, in 
addition to the time I have already lost, would be very unpleasant. 

*'I, therefore, determined to accept this offer, choosing to risk all 
in endeavoring to do something rather than spending moderately 
and living lazily at home. To explain myself then: I have pur- 
chased a cutter-sloop, of forty-three tons' burden, on a credit of two 
years. This vessel was built at Dieppe, and fitted out for a priva- 
teer; was taken by the English, and has been plying between Dover 
and Calais as a packet-boat. She has elegant accommodations, and 
sails fast. I shall copper her, put her in ballast, trim with £1000 
or £1500 sterling, in cargo, and proceed to the Isle of France and 
Bourbon, where I expect to sell her, as well as the cargo, at a very 
handsome profit, and have no doubt of being well paid for my 
twelve months' work, calculating to be with you next August. 

*'I have written to Uncle James respecting my account with Mr. 
Derby; have drawn bills in his favor for the balance, and advised 
him how I wish it disposed of. Should you be in want of cash 
before my return, do not hesitate to make use of my credit, so far 
as it will go. I will pay principal and any (the most exorbitant) 
interest on any money you find it necessary to take up ; and, 
although I know there is no risk in the bills I forwarded you on 
Mr. Haven of Portsmouth, N. H., for $900, except their having 
miscarried, yet I should feel easier if I knew you had the money. 

* ' Since I w^rote you last I have spent a month in Paris, and am 
very much pleased with that great capital. I prefer it to London, 
notwithstanding I have some of that foolish American partiality for 
everything that is English. 

** I left it ten days before this last surprising revolution, or, rather, 
tyrannical usurpation of the Jacobinical party. 

''I fear it will be many years before this country will enjoy such 
internal tranquillity as America is blessed with." 



18 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

It Will be seen that he designates his vessel in this 
letter as a " cutter-sloop of forty-three tons." As the 
English cutter of that date is a rig that is unknown 
with us, it is proper to state that its peculiarity con- 
sisted of a horizontal bowsprit, made to reef by sliding 
in on the deck. It was in a similar vessel that he 
subsequently made the voyage from Canton to the 
northwest coast of America. 

I continue the extracts from his letters, which give 
the main incidents of his experiences, and serve also to 
give a vivid conception of his personal character : 

''Havre, October 25, 1797. 

'* To-morrow I sball leave this for the Isle of France in my cutter, 
which, I assure you, is very handsome, and, I don't doubt, will sell 
for a good price. 

"Before I sell her I shall spend probably four or five months 
freighting about the Isle of Bourbon, waiting a favorable opportu- 
nity to wind up the voyage. 

*'It would have given me pleasure to have returned home and 
helped Bill or George to a berth on board a ship, but I must first 
have charge of said ship, which, at the present moment, I suspect 
is a charge difficult to obtain in America. It would certainly be 
very imprudent in any merchant at this time to send a ship on a 
long voyage, and I have no idea there will be any business of con- 
sequence done in America for five or six months to come; conse- 
quently I am induced to believe that you, as well as Mr. Derby, 
will approve of this undertaking. I have certainly a prospect of 
doing something handsome, and to have rejected such a liberal 
credit as was offered me would have been madness. 

*'By the above opportunity I wrote to Uncle James, enclosing 
bills on Mr. Derby for the balance of my account ... of which 
I desired him to pay you $200. This small supply, in addition to 
the bill I sent you from London for $900, will doubtless keep you 
in cash for some months; and when out, if my credit is good for 



LETTER TO HIS FATHER. 19 

anything at home, I shall be mortified if you don't make use of it; 
and, if necessary, this letter may be given as my promissory note to 
pay any debts you may contract on my account. I can have no 
greater pleasure than in discharging them. 

* * Of the insurance on this voyage, if £800 or £400 can be covered 
at ten, or even twelve, per cent., I have no objection to having it 
done, but have no idea of giving a higher premium, and choose 
rather to take the risk myself. It should be made on the vessel — 
the sloop Caroline of Salem — a French bottom, but with papers in 
complete order, and manned with Americans. We are bound 
direct for the Isles of France and Bourbon. Before you make 
this insurance Captain Kich will inform you of many particulars 
respecting the vessel wiiich may have a tendency to lessen the 
premium, and which it is very necessary the underwriters should 
know. 

"Since I have undertaken this business one of the first houses in 
this place has offered to fit out a ship purposely for me, and put 
in a rich cargo, but I had gone so far in the present speculation that 
it was too late. This may perhaps convince you that my time here 
has not been entirely misspent. On the contrary, I think I have 
formed such acquaintances here as may be of great service to me 
should I fail of finding employment in America, w^hich, by-the-bye, 
I only expect will be the case while the state of political affairs is 
such as to make it dangerous to do anything on a large scale. 
Such, I think, is the case at present, or I should have returned home 
from hence in expectation of being again employed by E. H. Derby, 
Jr., than which nothing could have been more gratifying to me; 
and, positively, while he will give me two thirds as much as any 
other merchant, I will sail for no other. 

'' When I shall meet my friends in Salem again is very uncertain. 
The prospect at present is very distant; but I hope it will not be 
more than twelve or fourteen months. Tis a long time to look 
forward, and I know you wish it were passed as w^ell as myself. 

*'I can't help loving home, though I think a young man ought to 
be at home in any part of the globe ; but few persons have so many 
valuable friends to regret being absent from as I have." 

* ' P. S. — By a letter from Paris, received this day by Mr. Prince, 
it appears that the American Commissioners have delivered their 



20 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

credentials twelve days ago, but have not yet received any answer 
from the Director}^, which is considered a bad omen. 

** Should a war take place between France and America while! 
am at the Mauritius, to secure my property I must become an 
inhabitant, which I have no objection to for a little while, provided 
I can improve my time advantageously. I shall have no other 
anxiety than that of not knowing whether you have a necessary 
supply of cash. 

''October 28th. — A head wind has detained me till to-day. Wo 
have official accounts of the definitive treaty with the emperor being 
signed. The defeat of the Dutch fleet you will undoubtedly have 
heard of before this reaches you." 

The allusion in this letter to the " particulars respect- 
ing the vessel whicli may have a tendency to lessen tho 
premium," and whicli were to be communicated by Cap- 
tain Eich, demands explanation. 

The fact was that he carried despatches from the Di- 
rectory to the ruling powers at tlie Isle of France, and 
was provided with a passport which secured him from 
molestation by French ships of war or privateers. 

He records the fact in his. narrative that this passport 
proved an efficient safeguard on one occasion when ho 
was brought to, after a long chase, by a French priva- 
teer, by which he was hailed in insulting terms; but a 
sight of the documents he bore caused a very sudden 
change of tone, and an immediate abandonment of any 
attempt at detention. 

The next letter gives an account of his first experi- 
ence on the voyage : 

''Havre, November 25, 1797. 

''My last was by the Nymph of New York, whose sudden de- 
parture left me only time to tell you I had been shipwrecked, and 
as I am confident you will wish to hear the particulars, I will now 
relate them to you. 



SHIPWRECK. 21 

**I left here on Tuesday at eleven o'clock, with a very strong 
N.E. wind, so fresh that when abreast the lighthouse I was obliged 
to balance-reef the mainsail and set the smallest jib, which, with the 
foresail, was as much as she would bear. I found it necessary to 
carry as much sail as possible, as otherwise we could not double 
Cape Barfleur, as the wind had already come round as far as N.N.E., 
and, increasing, caused such a sea as (our little vessel being deep 
loaded) kept her most of the time under water. At eight o'clock in 
the evening, the wind and sea still increasing, the bowsprit went by 
the board, and before we could clear the wreck of that, the foresail 
split half-way up and down the back rope. 

"My object then was to regain Havre, but my sailors, not being 
used to the motion of so small a vessel, were all (as well as myself) 
sea-sick, which, together with the fatigue we had undergone, ren- 
dered us imable to use such exertions as we could have done if w^e 
had been more used to the vessel. However, we made out to get her 
head towards Havre, and, in the morning, I found we were much 
to leeward of it. 

"Without anything for a spare bowsprit, I knew from the leeway 
we had already made that it would be impossible to keep off shore 
another night. I had then no other alternative but to try to enter 
the river Caen, but, when we reached the entrance, we found the 
tide was so far out that there was not water enough, and the sea 
broke at least a mile from shore. I then let go both anchors in 
about ten fathoms of water, in the hope that they might hold her 
till high water, but the cables soon parted, and, of course, we ran 
ashore near the village of Oestrahan. The alarm-gun had been fired 
at the fort, and the country people came quickly to our assistance. 
We all left the vessel, in expectation that she would soon go to 
pieces, and were conducted to the fort, where a large, comfortable 
fire was made, by which to shift and dry ourselves. This was 
Wednesday, at four o'clock in the afternoon, and was the first 
time any of us had had a dry thread on since twelve o'clock of the 
preceding day. I put up at an inn about a mile from where my 
vessel lay ; but my limbs were so swollen and painful, and my mind 
so tormented with the thought of having lost so much more than 
my all, that, as j^ou may suppose, I did not pass a very comfortable 
night. In the morning I was agreeably surprised to find, not only 



22 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

that my vessel had not gone to pieces, but that she was so little 
injured that by unlading she might be got off, and put in proper 
condition to go to Havre; which was soon accomplished, leaving 
part of the cargo with my mate to be freighted over. 

*' We are now repaired and ready for sea, with a loss to me of 
about $500. The principal loss on the cargo is occasioned by the 
several transportations. My credit, however, has not suffered in 
the least on this account, for I have not only found enough to re- 
pair the damages, but shall put in $1000 more, so that my cargo (al- 
though in a vessel of only forty tons) will amount to $7000. I now 
only wait for a wind to put to sea again. 

^'You may judge from these particulars whether I am to blame 
or not, and you will undoubtedly say I am, for not returning to 
Havre the afternoon of the day I left there, but my foolish pride 
would not suffer it. 

*'I must tell you that I never met such real friendship as I have 
from your old friend James Prince, who not only took me to his 
house, and begged me not to be discouraged, but immediately came 
forward with the ready cash to any amount I asked for. I believe 
him to be an exception to the general rule that we do good from 
selfish motives. 

*'In my last I requested that £700 or £800 might be insured on 
my vessel if it could be done at twelve per cent. I now repeat it, 
but would not advise giving a higher premium. After my arrival 
at the Isle of France or Bourbon it is very uncertain which way I 
shall bend my course. If I meet with a ready sale for my sloop and 
cargo, and can find a freight to Europe or America for a ship of 
three or four hundred tons, and can readily purchase such a vessel, 
I shall do it; but if this cannot be done, I shall either employ my 
vessel in freighting, or make a trip to the Cape of Good Hope with 
a load of coffee, sell for dollars, and go to Mocha for another load for 
the Cape, and thence to the Mauritius, by which time I shall proba- 
bly have collected such a property as will enable me to undertake 
something on a large scale. 

''The performance of these operations (if successful) will take up 
so much time that, long before I can arrive in America, the supplies 
of money I have sent you must be exhausted, and unless I meet with 
a very favorable opportunity to make a remittance (which, if I go to 



RENEWAL OF THE VOYAGE. 23 

Moclia, is not probable) you will not count upon it, nor do I think 
it will be necessary, as jon can easily get what funds you need with 
such security as a policy of insurance of £700 or £800 ; and here let 
me repeat what I have so often said, that I can receive no higher 
gratification than in supplying you, nor, on the contrary, is there 
anything that would mortify me more than that you should hesitate^ 
at making such use of my credit. 

*'0f politics you know I never say much, but I cannot help ob- 
serving that everything between France and America wears a very 
serious aspect. They treat the Americans with marked contempt, 
and I much fear the issue." 

The confident tone in which lie speaks in this letter 
of his future operations shows how little he had been 
affected by the misfortune which befell him at the out- 
set. But it will be seen by the next extract that the 
people on whom he had to depend for making up his 
crew, in Havre, entertained a very different opinion of 
the probable result of the voyage. 

His characteristic self-reliance is manifested by his 
indifference to the fears expressed by those who were 
less at home on the ocean, as well as by his putting to 
sea with the incompetent crew of which he gives so lu- 
dicrous a description. 

The London Literary Examiner of September 24, 
1842, in an extended review of his " Narrative," says, 
of the description he there gives of this voyage : 

*'Few things in De Foe, Dana, or any other truthteller are more 
characteristic than Mr. Cleveland's account of his voyage from Havre 
to the Cape of Good Hope. Surely never before was there such an 
Indiaman, with such a cargo and such a crew." 

And the reviev/ concludes as follows : 

*' We have dwelt on the circumstances of his first start because it 
at once illustrates the courage and daring of the narrator. 



24 VOYAGES OF' A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

'*His capital talent for description— quiet, forcible, and unexag- 
gerated — would be more quickly recognized if our space admitted of 
the quotations we would gladly have given from the detailed inci- 
dents of the voyage." 

Eeading between the lines of the following letter, we 
may discover a further evidence of character, which was 
not perceptible to the above writer, and was not revealed 
in tlie published account of the voj^age. 

It wull be seen that the letter is written as he was 
nearing the Cape of Good Hope, yet he makes no allu- 
sion to the peril he incurred by stopping there, and the 
wisdom of such caution w^as made manifest on his arri- 
val, by the very strict search and examination of his 
papers, to which he was immediately subjected. 

His stopping there was a matter of necessity, as the 
rats had gnawed his water -casks and he was forced to 
lay in a new supply. Before his arrival he had care- 
fully concealed the despatches he bore, and no evidence 
was discovered that any cause existed for his deten- 
tion. 

Yet the authorities at the Cape were so well convinced 
that such a voyage would not have been attempted ex- 
cept on some secret service of the French government, 
that they deemed it necessary to prevent its consumma- 
tion, and as no legitimate charge for condemnation could 
be found, they bought his vessel of him at a liberal ad- 
vance on her cost, and she was immediately put in ser- 
vice under command of a lieutenant of the royal navy. 
He probably was unused to the management of so small 
a craft, for he was never heard of after his departure 
on his first voyage. 



DESCRIPTION OF CREW. 25 

These facts will serve to throw much light on the fol- 
lowing letter, begun at sea and finished after his arrival 
at the Cape : 

'*0n Board Cutter 'Caroline': At Sea, March 20, 1798. 

** As we are now within a few hundred miles of the Cape, where 
we must touch for water, I take time by the forelock to have a let- 
ter ready to send you on arrival, well knowing that I shall after that 
have no time for writing. 

" Should you happen to see any person from Havre, who was 
candid enough to give you the general opinion entertained there of 
the ability of my cutter to weather this passage, you will no doubt 
be somewhat anxious till you hear from me. They concluded that 
we should founder in the first gale, from my vessel's being over- 
loaded, and as these apprehensions were communicated to my men 
they would run away or feign sickness, and these aggravations, after 
the disaster I had already met with, required every iota of my small 
stock of philosophy to support, and it was not till the last hour that 
I was in Havre (even while the visiting officers were on board) that 
I finally shipped my crew. 

''Fortunately, they were all so much in debt as not to w^ant any 
time to spend their advance, but were ready at the instant ; and with 
this motley crew (who, for aught I knew, were robbers or pirates) I 
put to sea. That you may form some idea of the fatigue and trouble 
I have had I will attempt to describe them to you. 

''At the head of the list is my mate, a Kantucket lad, whom I per- 
suaded the captain of a ship to discharge from before the mast, and 
who knew little or nothing of navigation, but is now capable of con- 
ducting the vessel in case of accident to me. The first of my fore- 
mast hands is a great, surly, crabbed, raw-boned, ignorant Prussian, 
who is so timid aloft that the mate has frequently been obliged to 
do his duty there. 

"I believe him to be more of a soldier than a sailor, though he 
has often assured me that he has been boatswain's mate of a Dutch 
Indiaman, which I do not believe, as he hardly knows how to put 
two ends of a rope together. He speaks enough English to be toler- 
ably understood. 

"The next in point of consequence is my cook, a good-natured 



26 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

negro and a tolerable cook, so unused to a vessel that in the smooth- 
est weather he cannot walk fore and aft without holding on to some- 
thing with both hands. This fear proceeds from the fact that he is 
so tall and slim that if he should get a cant it might be fatal to him. 
I did not think America could furnish such a specimen of the negro 
race (he is a native of Savannah), nor did I ever see such a perfect 
simpleton. It is impossible to teach him anything, and notwith- 
standing the frequency with which we have been obliged to take in 
and make sail on this long voyage, he can hardly tell the main-hal- 
iards from the mainstay. He one day took it into his head to learn 
the compass, and not being permitted to come on the quarter-deck 
to learn by the one in the binnacle, he took off the cover of the till 
of his chest, and with his knife cut out something that looked like a 
cartwheel, and wanted me to let him nail it on the deck to steer by, 
insisting that he could * teer by him better 'n tudder one.' 

** Next is an English boy of seventeen years old, who, from having 
lately had the small-pox, is feeble and almost blind, a miserable ob- 
ject, but pity for his misfortunes induces me to make his duty as 
easy as possible. Pinally, I have a little ugly French boy, the very 
image of a baboon, who, from having served for some time on differ- 
ent privateers, has all the tricks of a veteran man-of-war's man, 
though only tliirteen years old, and by having been in an English 
prison has learned enough of the language to be a proficient in 
swearing. To hear all these fellows quarrelling (which, from not 
understanding each other, they are very apt to do) serves to give one 
a realizing conception of the confusion of tongues at the Tower of 
Babel. Nobody need envy me my four months' experience with 
such a set, though they are now far better than when I first took 
them. 

** Absence has not banished home from my thoughts; indeed, I 
should be M'^orse than a savage were I to forget such friends as I 
have, yet such is now my roving disposition that were it not for 
meeting them, I doubt if I should ever return. My last news of 
you was by a scrap of paper tucked into one of Mr. Derby's letters 
by Uncle James, bearing simply the words, * Your friends are all well. 
J. J.' Did he know but half the pleasure this scrap of paper gave 
me while it conveyed such welcome news, he would omit no oppor- 
tunity of sending a similar line. I keep the letter folded as I re- 



POLITICAL CONJECTURES. 27 

ceived it, and never open it without a revival of the sensations I ex- 
perienced on its receipt. 

*'It seems not improbable that we may become involved in war, 
in which case, to secure my property, it may become necessar}'- for 
me to become a citoyen. The French seem determined that we shall 
fight either them or the English, and although I am no advocate for 
the treaty which gives them such offence, yet should it be broken to 
please them, or should an apology be made (as they request) for any 
part of the president's independent speech, I should be ashamed in 
any foreign country to acknowledge myself an American. But 
these are sacrifices America cannot make. In my opinion the hor- 
rors of the most bloody war should be preferred. 

** You may perhaps laugh at me and call it quixotism, but I be- 
lieve if we would keep our ships at home, and entirely withhold our 
supplies, we could be more than a match for tfiese two noisy powers 
united. I see no reason why we can't live for a time without foreign 
commerce. 

''France by her amazing conquests having risen so rapidly to the 
height of strength and power, will, I expect, afford another example 
of human instability in as rapid a decline, for, can her citizens, al- 
ready worn out with the length of the war, see themselves plunged 
so much deeper in it without uniting with some of those frequent 
conspiracies to reform the government? I think not, and it appears 
to me that nothing but such a reform can save us from war. If we 
go to war with France, Spain, without doubt, must come in for a 
share of it, and what a field would then be presented for conquest, 
for (supplied in part with ships by the English) we should soon be- 
come masters of the West India Islands, Louisiana and Florida could 
not resist us, and why might we not expect to establish the inde- 
pendence of South America, thereby opening a commerce which 
would prove a very lucrative one to our merchants, while it secures 
us an ally and weakens our enemy? 

''Without doubt you will be surprised at my advancing an opin- 
ion on any political subject, but it is almost impossible to remain in 
Europe so long as I have, at the French crisis, without catching a 
little of the distemper; however, it has not taken such hold of me 
but that I can attend to other business, as a proof of which, and a 
fear that my letter is already too long, I will bring it to a close." 



28 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

He arrived on the 21st of March, 1798, three montlis 
from the tiine of leaving Havre, and although it was 
nearly 10 p.m. when he dropped anchor, he was im- 
mediately boarded by a man-of-war's boat, and he was 
taken ashore for an interview with the admiral, Sir 
Hngh Christian. 

Of the popular interest excited by the appearance of 
liis vessel he says, in his "ITarrative :" 

*' The arrival of such a vessel from Europe naturally excited the 
curiosity of the inhabitants of the Cape; and, the next morning being 
calm, we had numerous visitors on board, who could not disguise 
their astonishment at the size of the vessel, the boyish appearance of 
the master and mate, the queer and unique characters of the two 
men and boy who composed the crew, and the length of the passage 
we had accomplished. Various were the conjectures of the good 
people of the Cape as to the real object of our enterprise. While 
some viewed it in its true light as a commercial speculation, others 
believed that, under this mask, we were employed by the French 
government for the conveyance of their despatches, and some even 
went so far as to declare their belief that we were French spies, and, 
as such, deserving of immediate arrest and confinement. Indeed, 
our enterprise formed the principal theme of conversation at the 
Cape during the week subsequent to our arrival." 

The following letter gives a brief account of his ex- 
periences : 

" Cape of Good Hope, March 22, 1798. 

''We arrived here at nine o'clock last evening, after the very long 
passage of eighty -nine days. Since leaving the equator we have had 
very unfavorable winds, or we should have made a good passage, as 
my cutter sails exceedingly well, and is as good a sea-boat as I ever 
was on board of. 

**Our good friends, the English, concluded at once, on my arri- 
val, that they had a prize. I was conducted on board a man-of-war, 
and thence ashore to the admiral, at ten o'clock the same evening 
I arrived. The most particular inquiries were made, and the next 



ARRIVAL AT CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. 29 

day a strict search was made on board for papers. My waste-book, 
journal, private letters, and other papers were all taken ashore to the 
admiral, and all the letters I had for French gentlemen in the Mau- 
ritius were broken open. Such a strict search I never underwent 
before, though I believe I bore it with a tolerable grace. 

''By Lord Macartney and the admiral (Sir Hugh Christian) I was 
treated very politely, but the extreme importance of the blustering 
lieutenants was in the highest degree disgusting. 'Tis a dangerous 
moment to express myself fully. Prudence dictates a reserve, and 
I shall obey her till I have the pleasure of meeting you. 

*' I have sold my cutter to the admiral for $5000, with permission 
to carry away $10,000. If my cargo had sold for as handsome 
advance on the cost as the vessel has I should have made a very 
handsome voyage, but this is not the case. The cargo will net lit- 
tle, if any, more than the original cost, and, from intelligence direct 
from the Mauritius, I am convinced that if I had gone there I should 
have met with considerable loss. 

*'I am exceedingly anxious to hear from home : whether we are 
now at peace or war, how the American navy goes on, from whence 
the oflScers are to come, whether we have a military school, and (what 
more nearly concerns me) whether Bill and George are in the navy 
or army, for I cannot conceive of their remaining neuter. On the 
contrary, I trust their ambition will lead them to be foremost in 
danger, considering life as a secondary object when engaged in the 
cause of justice and honor." 

These two letters appear to me to possess sncli intrin- 
sic interest, from the evidence of character they afford, 
that I have thought it best to give them in full, though 
they contain much that is irrelevant to the voyage. If 
we take into consideration the fact that the writer was 
then only twenty-four, that the only advantages of edu- 
cation he had enjoyed were those afforded by the com- 
mon scliools of Salem in tlie last century, and that he 
had left school at fourteen to enter a counting-room, 
from wliich, at eighteen, he had embarked on his first 



30 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

voyage, it must be acknowledged that tliese letters are 
remarkable, alike for the intelligent thought and deci- 
sion they display, and for the simplicity and ease of 
their style. And to this I may add that, like all his 
journals and letters, they are written in a hand which 
rivals copper-plate in the perfect symmetry of every 
line and letter. 

Taken in connection with the successful accomplish- 
ment of the voyage, which so many had declared to be 
impossible, they furnish a very interesting illustration 
of the intellectual development which had been stimu- 
lated by the commercial activity of Salem. 

The history of the arrangements for the sale of vessel 
and cargo, and their final result, cannot be better told 
than in the following extract from the published "I^ar- 
rative :'^ 

*' The next day my papers and letters were returned to me by the 
secretary of the admiral, and I was surprised by a proposition from 
him for the purchase of the vessel. I delayed giving an immediate 
answer, and in the meantime my inquiries led me to believe that my 
cargo would sell advantageously; but there was nothing but specie 
that would answer my purpose to take away, and that was prohib- 
- ited. With a provision for the removal of this difficulty, and a good 
price for my vessel, I was prepared to negotiate with the secretary. 
Meeting him at the time appointed, and both being what in trade is 
called off-hand men, we soon closed the bargain by his engaging to 
pay me, on delivery of the Caroline and stores, five thousand Spanish 
dollars, and to obtain for me permission to export ten thousand. 
This so far exceeded the cost of the vessel, and was even so much 
more than I had expected to receive at the Isle of France, that I con- 
sidered myself well indemnified for all my trouble and anxiety. 

*'As the admiral was pressing to have the vessel discharged, it 
was my intention to land the cargo next day on my own account; 
but in the meantime I contracted with the merchant at whose house 



UNEXPECTED DIFFICULTIES. 31 

I now resided, for the whole of it at a moderate advance on the in- 
voice, it being agreed that he was to pay the duties, the expense of 
landing, etc. My spirits were now much elevated with my success, 
the prospect of soon being rid of the Caroline, and of the care insep- 
arable from having such a vessel, so circumstanced. 

''But new and alarming difficulties awaited me, of which I had 
no suspicion, and which were more harassing than the dangers of 
winds and waves, It appeared that the duties on entries at the cus- 
tom-house were a percentage on the invoice, and that it was a very 
common practice with the merchants to make short entries. The 
purchaser of my cargo was aware that, to stand on equal footing 
with other merchants, he must do as they did ; but he seems not to 
have reflected that, being known to be more hostile to the English 
government than any other individual at the Cape, he would be 
rigidly watched, and, if detected, would have less indulgence than 
any other. The consequence was a detection of the short entry and 
a seizure of vessel and cargo. 

*'The merchant w^ent immediately, in a supplicating mood, to the 
collector, in the hope of arranging the affair before it should become 
generally known, but it was all in vain. 

*'The only alternative that seemed now to be left me was to 
appeal to the highest authority, and I determined to write to Lord 
Macartney, and prove to him that, by my contract for the sale of the 
cargo, the duties were not to be paid by me, and that, consequently, 
I should have derived no benefit had the attempt for evading them 
succeeded , but that, on the other hand, if the vessel and cargo were 
to be confiscated, I should be the sufferer, as it was doubtful if the 
merchant could make good the loss. I hoped he might thus be in- 
duced to advise a less severe course than the collector intended to 
pursue. But how to write a suitable letter embarrassed me. I had 
no friend with whom to advise. I was entirely ignorant of the 
proper manner of addressing a nobleman, and at the same time was 
aware of the necessity of conforming to customary rules. In this 
dilemma I remembered to have seen, in an old magazine on board 
my vessel, some letters addressed to noblemen. These I sought as 
models, and they were a useful guide to me. After completing my 
letter in my best hand, I enclosed it in a neat envelope and showed it 
to the admiral's secretary, who appeared to be friendly to me. He 



32 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

approved of it, and advised my taking it myself to his lordship im- 
mediately.. 

*'As the schoolboy approaches his master after having played 
truant, so did I approach Lord Macartney on this occasion. I de- 
livered my letter to him, and, after hastily reading it, he sternly said 
that * he could not interfere in the business; there were the laws, 
and if they had been infringed the parties concerned must abide the 
consequences;' but he added he * would speak to the collector on 
the subject.' This last addition, delivered in rather a milder tone, 
led me to encourage the hope that the affair would not end so disas- 
trously as if left entirely to the discretion of the collector. Nor 
were my hopes unfounded, as the next day the vessel and that part 
of the cargo yet remaining on board were restored to me ; while the 
portion in the possession of the collector was to be adjudged ia the 
fiscal court, where it was eventually condemned, to the amount of 
about $2000, which, as a favor to the merchant, I agreed to share 
with him. The success of my letter was the theme of public con- 
versation in the town, and was the means of procuring me the ac- 
quaintance of several individuals of the first respectability. 

''The delay caused by this controversy was unfavorable to the 
views of the admiral, who began to evince symptoms of impatience, 
and would probably have taken out the cargo with his own men if 
we had not set about it with earnestness as soon as the vessel was 
released from seizure. Having, the day following, completed the 
unlading, I delivered the vessel to the officer who was authorized to 
take possession. In two days after she was expedited, with a lieu- 
tenant of the navy in command and a competent number of men (I 
believe for India), and in a subsequent voyage I learned that she 
never had been heard of afterwards. It is probable that the officer 
in charge, having been accustomed only to large and square-rigged 
vessels, was not aware of the delicacy of management required by 
one so small and differently rigged, and to this her loss may be at- 
tributed. 

' ' The various drawbacks on my cargo, arising from seizure, some 
damage, and some abatement, reduced the net proceeds to about the 
original cost. This, with the amount of the vessel, I collected in 
Spanish dollars, making altogether, after my various disbursements, 
the sum of $11,000, which I kept in readiness to embark on the first 






AT THE CAPE. 33 

vessel that should enter the bay on her way to India or China. I 
was obliged, however, to wait several months before any such chance 
offered. In the meantime my long residence and leisure at the Cape 
afforded me the opportunity of becoming acquainted with many 
families, and of visiting many places of interest in the vicinity of 
Cape Town " 
2^ 



CHAPTEE III. 

Voyage from China to the Northwest Coast of America.— Letters 
from Canton. — Difficulties of the Undertaking. — Hardships of 
the Voyage. — Mutiny of the Men. — Adventures on the Coast. — 
Safe Return to Canton. 

Although the authorities at the Cape could discover 
no evidence that he was actually a bearer of despatches 
from the Directory, the measures they adopted served 
effectually to prevent their delivery. 

It was more than four months before an opportunity 
offered to leave the Cape, and so long a time elapsed 
before he visited the Isle of France that the final de- 
livery of the despatches to the authorities there served 
only to prove that he had been faithful to his trust. 
The following is his last letter before leaving the 

Cape: 

*' Cape of Good Hope, August 1, 1798. 
*'Were you to judge from the date of my letter, you would 
undoubtedly conclude I was thus far on my return from India, and 
with reason, for no one would suppose it possible to remain in this 
place four months without meeting an opportunity for Bengal. 
This, however, has really been my case, whether from a decline of 
the American commerce, or a dislike of the masters of ships to 
subject themselves to the scrutiny practised by the officers of the 
navy, or both, I know not; but, in consequence of it, and a fear 
that it may be yet a long time before I meet such an opportunity as 
I wish, I have taken up with the only one that has offered, on board 
the brig Betsey of Baltimore, and we sail to-morrow morning for 
Batavia. I could have wished we were bound to a more pleasant 



FROM CANTON TO THE NORTHWEST COAST. 35 

climate; but my patience was quite exhausted, and I preferred 
risking my health to waiting any longer here. I do not intend 
coming home before the spring or summer of 1799. Please advise 
my friend, Mr. James Prince, of my destination.'' 

In his next letter from Batavia we have the first 
intimation of his contemplation of a voyage to the 
northwest coast of America, and in the succeeding one, 
from Canton, the announcement of his decision to at- 
tempt it. As this was one of his most adventurous 
voyages, involving certain exposure to very great hard- 
ship, with constant risk of destruction ; and as the 
danger was incalculably increased by the circumstances 
attendant upon it, these letters possess especial interest, 
showing as they do his recognition of the difficulties he 
had to encounter, by the efforts he made to find other 
means of profitable investment, and his wish to save his 
friends from anxiety, by the pains he takes to assure 
them of his excellent equipment for the voyage. 

The appreciation of its boldness in the minds of com- 
petent judges is afforded by the incidental testimony of 
an unprejudiced witness. 

It happened that, on his arrival at Canton, after the 
successful accomplishment of the voyage, a Russian 
exploring expedition, under the command of Admiral 
Kruzenstern, was lying in port. 

In his subsequently published history of the expe- 
dition the admiral mentions the fact of my father's 
arrival at Canton while he was there, and speaks of the 
voyage as a very extraordinary one. 

lie makes the mistake, however, of ascribing its 
achievement to an Englishman, which probably arose 



36 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

from the fact tliat the vessel had previously been under 
English colors, and again assumed them on my fathers 
return, when slie was sold to an Englishman. The 
history of the Kussian expedition was reviewed in the 
North American^ of w^hich Jared Sparks was then 
editor ; and, in order to correct this mistake, he, being 
a warm personal friend of my father, procured from 
him a somewhat detailed account of the voyage, wdiicli 
may be found in No. 57 of the North American Review 
(October, 1827). It is introduced with the prefatory 
remark that — 

**As this voyage was one of an extraordinary character, and 
evinced a degree of enterprise, perseverance, and decision rarely to 
be met with, and worthy of imitation, we are happy to have an op- 
portunity to lay a short sketch of it before our readers." 

After giving my father's account of its leading inci- 
dents, the notice concludes w-ith the following com- 
ment: 

'' Thus was accomplished, in about eight months, one of the most 
arduous, successful, and, all things considered, hazardous voyages 
of which any account has been given." 

At this date I trust that no apology is necessary for 
giving the following letters in full : 

''Batavia, September 11, 1798. 

*' Before my departure from the Cape I left a few lines with Mr. 
Hubner, to inform you of my detention. It would give me great 
pleasure if I could now inform you of my speedy return from hence. 

" Had I been fortunate enough to meet with a vessel that could 
take fifty or sixty tons freight to America or Europe, I should have 
made a very handsome voyage. Coffee can be purchased here at 
8f cents per lb., American weight, deliverable on board; sugar at 



FKOM CANTON TO THE NORTHWEST COAST. 37 

$6.50 per cwt. ; either of which articles would probably yield a profit 
of two hundred per cent, clear of all charges. But this prospect I 
am obliged to leave, or wait in this unhealthy climate at a great 
expense, without being certain of an opportunity. Of the two evils 
I have made choice of the former as the smallest, and shall sail 
to-morrow in the ship Swift, of New York, Captain White, for 
China. From thence I shall endeavor to freight for the Mauritius, 
if possible; if not, direct for America; and if neither of these can be 
done, I shall then probably purchase a small vessel and go to the 
northwest coast for furs; but this last I shall not do unless the 
prospect is very great, and there is no possibility of getting to 
America or Europe. 

*' The remittance I made you from Europe will not be near adequate 
to your wants, and were I not acquainted with the resources you 
have, I should be very uneasy on your account. I can easily con- 
ceive of its being disagreeable to you to take up money on my 
account, but, while you are doing it, you ought to recollect the 
pleasure I derive from discharging those debts. Were it not for 
this, money would hardly be worth taking care of. I hope to be 
with you in May next. " 

" Canton, November 24, 1798. 

*' As there will be a direct opportunity to write you in about a 
month by a Salem and a Boston vessel, I intended to let this vessel 
go without writing, but recollecting, if I did, you would not expect 
my being here next year, and would, in consequence, miss the 
opportunity of sending me letters by the ships that will be leaving 
America about the time you will receive this, I hastened to remind 
you of it, and that I shall look out for letters by New York, Boston, 
or Salem vessels. I am now about two years absent from my 
friends, and have not received a line from any of them. Remind 
them of this, and I know they won't fail to write me. 

'*I endeavored to freight my property home to America, more 
with a desire of being again employed bjr Mr. E. H. Derby, Jr., 
than profit, or any other consideration; but my efforts were in- 
effectual without making too great sacrifices, and I had no other 
alternative than doing as I have done, which is to fit out an expedi- 
tion to the northwest coast of America for furs. 

" I am two-thirds concerned in a fine cutter, and the same propor- 



38 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

tion of cargo. We shall be well manned and armed, and, I doubt 
not, meet with success. The prospect is considered greater at 
present than it has been for several years past. If Bill or George 
have become sailors, and are inclined to enter the fur trade, I 
doubt not of being able to do something for one of them; though 
it would not be prudent to come dependent on meeting me here, 
because, if I fail of success the first season, I shall winter on the 
coast. I shall write you very particularly by the Boston and Salem 
vessels.'* 

*' Canton, December 15, 1798. 

**I have written you two letters from this place, both of which 
will advise you that I am bound to the northwest coast of America. 

''The only part I wish to repeat is concerning a provision for 
yourself. Do anything with me or my property rather than want. 
I know you have many warm friends in Salem, and I know how 
unpleasant it is to ask assistance of them; but, as it is only for the 
moment, and it is quite out of my power to make you a remittance, 
I do not see that you can do otherwise. 

**I want exceedingly to see you and my valued friends in Salem,, 
but my pride (for it is nothing else) will long deny me that hap- 
piness." 

" Canton, January 6, 1799. 

''This is the last letter I shall write you this season, as I shall sail 
to-morrow for the northwest coast of America. We are thirty days 
earlier than I at first intended, in consequence of hearing of several 
vessels from America on the same voyage ; and have so enlarged our 
stock as to make it amount to $18,600. Should we not be the first 
vessel on the coast, I am persuaded we shall do as well as those that 
are. 

*' We have every possible advantage. A vessel well calculated for 
inland navigation, the best articles of trade that can be carried, a 
linguist who speaks the Indian language as well as his own, and 
officers experienced in the business. Should we fail of success, with 
all these advantages, it will be very extraordinary ill-fortune, and 
such as I don't choose to expect. 

"I wrote you a long letter by the Elizabeth, and desired you to 
use my credit for any money you may want; and even to sell out a 
part or the whole of my present speculation rather than be distressed. 



I 



DIFFICULTIES OF THE VOYAGE. 39 

"Should your other sources fail, I insist that you do anything 
with me or mine rather than want. Should Bill or George come to 
China, and my first voyage prove successful, I could give one of 
them a berth on board my cutter; and w^hen I leave her, which I 
expect to do after two seasons, will leave the consignments with the 
one who chooses the business. '' 



It will be seen in this last letter that he dwells upon 
the encouraging features of the undertaking, but makes 
no allusion to the circumstances which would have de- 
terred most men from attempting it, and of which he 
must have been fully aware, even if he had not been 
warned of them by veteran navigators, who regarded 
the attempt as the wild scheme of an inexperienced 
youth of twenty-five. 

It is proper that these circumstances should be fully 
stated, in order that they may be appreciated by those 
who are ignorant of the technical obstacles he had to en- 
counter. The first and most important of these was the 
fact that, until he could weather the northern end of 
Formosa, his course was directly in the teeth of the 
northeast monsoon, which at that season blew almost in- 
cessantly, and often with great violence, and would have 
rendered the voyage, in a square-rigged vessel, an im- 
possibility. This difficulty would have been removed 
could he have waited a month later, as he first intended ; 
but the news that ships had sailed from Boston for the 
same object rendered the necessity of being early upon the 
coast an essential condition of success. His theory was 
that, in his small fore-and-aft-rigged vessel — which will 
run several points nearer the wind than a square rig — 
he could beat up the coast of China, keeping so near the 



40 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. . 

shore that he could run in and come to anchor when 
the weather was so tempestuous that he could make no 
headway against it. But this, of course, exposed liim 
to such danger of shipwreck as he would have escaped 
on the open ocean, with plenty of sea-room ; and this 
danger was greatly enhanced by the fact that no accu- 
rate chart of the coast could be procured, and the near- 
est approach to it he was able to get w^as a manuscript 
map, drawn for him by a navigator who had some fa- 
miliarity with its features. For the performance of such 
duties as would be required, it was eminently desirable 
that his crew should be composed of orderly, reliable, 
and efficient seamen, and the risk of capture by the Ind- 
ians, after arriving on the coast of America, made it 
necessary to carry a much larger crew than the ordinary 
complement of a vessel of that size. The only men that 
could be had, however, were of the worst class— the de- 
serters from other vessels, who were hanging about Can- 
ton, ready to take up with any means of egress that 
offered. It is, perhaps, difficult, at this day, for a mar- 
iner whose experience of ocean life has been gained 
under the light of modern science, and with the aid of 
modern appliances and inventions, to appreciate the dif- 
ficulty, danger, and hardship of such a voyage, or the 
courage and determined will required for its successful 
execution. He sailed from Canton on the lOth of Janu- 
ary, 1799, passing Macao at four p.m. on the same day, 
and keeping a long distance from the shipping, lest some 
of his men might be reclaimed by the ships from which 
they had deserted. 
I do not propose to repeat the details of the voyage, 



. VOYAGE TO THE NORTHWEST COAST. 41 

whicli lias been so well told in liis "Narrative." His jour- 
nal of each day's experience is in my possession, and 
also a manuscript of t went}' -eight pages of letter-sheet, 
written at sea, when on his return, for the entertain- 
ment of his father, giving a full account of all his ex- 
periences; and the performance of the voyage itself is 
scarcely less wonderful than the fact that, under all tha 
difficulties of the situation, both journal and manuscript 
are executed in a hand like copper-plate, such as not 
one man in a thousand could equal with every appliance 
for skilful penmanship. Yet this was long before the 
invention of metallic pens, and, to his latest day, my 
father disdained their use, and adhered to the goose- 
quill. A few extracts from these manuscripts, written 
at the time, and without a thought of their ever being 
made public, will serve to show some of the character- 
istics which, in reality, formed the groundwork of his 
success. Thus, in the account of the voyage written 
for his father's amusement, the opening passage shows 
clearly how fully he was aware of the difficulties he had 
to encounter, and how carefully he had considered his 
means of coping with them : 

*' I think you were informed, by one of my last letters from Chi- 
na, of my determination to sail from thence earlier than I at first 
intended, in consequence of hearing of several vessels fitting out for 
a similar voyage from America; and to this I am indebted for the 
success of my voyage, as I shall show you in course. It was, how- 
ever, contrary to the advice of my best friends, and the most expe- 
rienced navigators in those seas, some of whom took considerable 
pains to dissuade me from it by telling me, that, as it was at the 
height of the northeast monsoon, there would be a continual rapid 
current against me, and frequent gales of wind; that I might beat a 



42 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

month without gaining any to windward, and should finally return 
— if at all — with my sails and rigging torn to pieces, to refit. I was, 
as you will imagine, not pleased with such gloomy prospects, but 
concluded that, if I was to meet ruin, it might as well be by being 
torn to pieces on the China coast as to arrive on the coast of Amer- 
ica after the object of my voyage had been secured by other vessels. 
I was the more encouraged to make the trial as I could not learn 
that it had ever been attempted at the same season of the year by 
any European ; therefore my advisers could not be certain of its im- 
practicability. I knew, also, that they supposed I should keep at — 
what is generally called — a prudent distance from the shore, and did 
not conceive that any man would beat up, for the most part, within 
hail of an extensive, dangerous coast, not only without having any 
experience along it, but with no other guide than an imperfect man- 
uscript chart. 

''The handiness of my vessel and her easy draught of water led 
me to do this, in the expectation that I should meet with regular 
tides, and that, when they were against me, I should often be able 
to anchor, and on this I principally depended for the accomplishment 
of this arduous task. On the 10th January, 1799, having all hands 
on board, in number twenty-one persons, consisting — except two 
Americans— of English, Irish, Swedes, and French, but principally 
the first, who were runaways from the men-of-war and Indiamen, 
and two from a Botany Bay ship, who had made their escape — for 
we were obliged to take such as we could get — served to complete a 
list of as accomplished villains as ever disgraced any country. I 
weighed anchor from Anson's Bay at eight a.m., with a fresh breeze 
from the northeast, and cloudy, unpleasant weather, passing Macao 
Roads at four p.m. at a considerable distance, fearing to go within 
gunshot of the shipping, lest they should bring us to and take our 
men out, many of whom belonged to these very ships." 

Three weeks of incessant labor, hardship, and expos- 
ure proved that the terrors of the voyage had not been 
exaggerated. Beating up against the w^ind whenever a 
favorable tide or a temporary diminution in its violence 
enabled them to do so, yet often finding tliemselves, at 



VOYAGE TO THE NORTHWEST COAST. 43 

night, abreast, and sometimes leagues to leeward of, the 
point they had left in the morning; running in to an- 
chor at night at any harbor they could make, and avail- 
ing themselves, in doing so, of the information they 
could get from the fishermen or proprietors of the 
junks, of which they often found large fleets at anchor 
in the harbors ; several times having hair-breadth escapes 
from sunken rocks, on which they touched or passed 
close by in ignorance, and so continually wet through 
that the labor of carrying clothes up into the rigging to 
dry was unremitting, caused such suffering and depres- 
sion in the crew as finally to break out in open mu- 
tiny. 

A single extract will serve as a sample of the experi- 
ences so often repeated that even the perusal of them 
in the daily journal becomes depressing from its painful 
monotony : 

*'0n the morning of tlie 21st we weighed anchor, and put out in 
company with several junks, and tiU the 24th had no other than a 
head wind, sometimes blowing very fresh, at others moderate. In 
the former case, when we could gain nothing by beating, we gener- 
ally found a smooth place in which to anchor, and in the latter were 
always forced to anchor when the tide made against us. In the 
morning of the 24th we had a light breeze from southwest, which, 
soon after increasing, blew a good whole-sail breeze all day, and 
I was flattering myself it would carry us round the north end of 
Formosa, when the most difficult part of the passage would have 
been completed ; but in this I was grievously disappointed, for, at 
eight P.M., the wind shifted, in a squall, to its old quarter, the north- 
east, and blew very hard. Till the night of the 26th we continued 
plying to windward near the shore, when, it being very dark, we 
could not gain an anchorage, and therefore stood out to sea till seven 
o'clock the next morning, and then tacked to stand in again. At 



44 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

this time it blew a gale of wind; the sea had, coDsequently, risen 
very high, and, in carrying our double-reefed sails, our little vessel 
was mostly under water. At half-past nine, seeing the water break 
considerably ahead, we supposed it to be caused by a strong current 
setting to windward, and therefore did not alter our course to avoid 
it, particularly as we judged we must have passed over it while 
standing out. However, in passing it this time the vessel struck once, 
a severe shock, and the next wave carried us over, but filled the 
deck with sand. We immediately tried the pumps, and had the 
satisfaction to find the vessel yet tight, and apparently uninjured. 
After escaping this danger, where, had we stopped, the vessel must 
inevitably have perished, we ran in to find a harbor, and succeeded 
by running four leagues to leeward, and at three p.m. anchored in a 
smooth, sandy bay near a fleet of junks, which, like ourselves, had 
put in to avoid the storm. " 

It had become obvious that a mutinous spirit was 
working among the men, and on the morning of Janu- 
ary 30, when the order was given to weigh anchor, the 
boatswain came aft with the announcement that they 
had come to a determination to do no more duty till 
certain conditions were agreed to, among which were, 
that they should do no unnecessary work, of which they 
were to be the judges; all hands should never be kept 
up, except when they saw proper, and the first officer's 
conduct must be regulated by a line they would mark 
out, etc. 

N^o grosser miscalculation of character was ever made 
than by these men, in supposing they could accomplish 
their object by threats or intimidation. 

Immediately on their refusing to do duty locks were 
put upon the harness-casks, and tliey were told that, if 
they would not work, they should not eat. A few of 
the men remained faithful, and none more so than black 



MUTINY OF CREW. 45 

George, the ungainly negro described in the account of 
the voyage from Havre. Whatever might be his defi- 
ciencies, George had no lack of courage, and he knew 
how to appreciate kind usage. He had once saved his 
master's life, when a slave in Georgia, at the cost of a 
severe gunshot wound from a treacherous Indian, and 
his freedom was given him as the reward. But his sub- 
sequent employers had taken advantage of his simplic- 
ity, and cheated him out of his wages, till he had learned 
to distrust every one. My fathers treatment of him was 
so unHke his previous experiences that he would not 
leave him, but remained with him as his servant for 
several years, and finally died in Boston, and was buried 
there, with a suitable headstone erected by my father 
in memory of his services. 

With the small force who refused to join the muti- 
neers immediate preparations were made to resist the 
expected attack from them, as they swore they would 
have provisions. 

Two 4-pound cannon were loaded with grape-shot, 
and pointed forward from the quarter-deck, and every 
one in the after part of the vessel was armed with a 
musket and a brace of pistols. It should be remembered 
that this was in the day of flint-locks, and nearly fifty 
years before revolvers came into use. The men were 
then told that, if any one of them came abaft the hatch- 
way, he would be instantly shot, and, if they attempted to 
come in a body, or to take provisions from the harness- 
casks, the decks would be swept by the cannon, at each 
of which a man was stationed with a lighted match. As 
the mutineers had no other arms than handspikes and 



46 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

hatchets, they did not venture an attack, bnt stood at 
bay, hurling imprecations at their opponents; and thus 
they watched each other for the whole da3\ 

Towards night the proposition was made to set them 
ashore, which they eagerly agreed to, on the supposition 
that they could then make their ow^n terms for return- 
ing, as they knew that tlie voyage could not be prose- 
cuted with the small number that remained. My father, 
on the other hand, was equally confident that their situ- 
iiation on shore w^ould be so uncomfortable that they 
would be glad to be allowed to return on board on con- 
dition of doing their duty. And such proved to be the 
case, as will be seen from the following extract from his 
own account : 

'* As our anchorage was not secure, we, the next naorning, weighed 
and ran into a sandy bay, where the men had been landed. 

** As soon as the sails were hoisted three of the men made their 
appearance, and — supposing we were going off to leave them — kept 
waving their jackets and hats for us to send for them. When we 
had anchored I sent a boat ashore, but only one of them came off in 
her, and he gave such a lamentable account of their treatment on 
shore that I felt confident of bringing the others to terms. The 
boatswain and one sailor, being the ringleaders of the mutiny, and 
very dangerous men, I determined not to take on any account. 

*' They kept in sight of the vessel all day. In the afternoon, with 
my glass, I saw the gunner come down to the shore and wave his 
jacket. I immediately sent the boat for him, but the others, seeing 
this, ran after him and forced him to go back with them. One of 
the ringleaders sent off word that if I would send a written agree- 
ment to use them well they would all return to their duty. My only 
reply was to hoist the boat on board again, seeing which they moved 
off to find shelter for the night. 

'*It was late in the morning of February 3 before any of them 
made their appearance. At nine o'clock we hoisted the colors, fired 



J 



MUTINY OF CREW. 47 

a 4-pound cannon, and weighed anchor, when they all came out from 
behind a rock, where they had doubtless been watching our motions, 
I then ordered the boat out, and with my second officer and four 
hands, well armed, went as near the beach as the surf would permit. 
I called them all down to the water's side and told them I was then 
going away ; that I knew there were several of them desirous of re- 
turning to their duty, but were deterred by the others ; that if they 
would come forward I would protect them, and would fire at any 
one who tried to prevent them. They replied that they were all 
ready and willing to return to their duty, but the two ringleaders 
were more ready than the others, and when they were rejected they 
swore none of the others should go, and presented their knives at 
the breasts of two of them and threatened to stab them if they at- 
tempted to do so ; a third seemed indifferent, and a fourth was lying 
drunk on the beach. Having secured three, and one yesterday, 
which was four out of the ten, and which, with a little additional 
precaution, was securing the success of the expedition, I did not 
think proper to put my threat in execution of firing on them. 

*' After dinner I sent the second officer with four hands, well 
armed, to make a last effort, but by this time those whose fate was 
decided had persuaded the others to share it with them, and had 
carried the drunken man out of reach, declaring that they knew we 
dare not go on the coast of America with so feeble a crew, and we 
should take them all or nona 

''Having now a light breeze from the westward and a favorable 
current, I concluded to have no further altercation with them, and 
immediately hoisted in the boat and made sail, leaving on the island 
of Kemoy (which is about three hundred and fifty miles northeast 
of Canton) six of my most able men. This was such a reduction of 
our number as would require unceasing vigilance and extraordinary 
caution to counteract, as the risk of being attacked by the Indians 
was, of course, increased in proportion to -our diminished power of 
resistance." 

To save the necessity of future recurrence to this ap- 
parently unfortunate experience, I may mention here 
that the six men \vlio were left on shore were sub- 
sequently sent by the Chinese authorities to Canton, 



48 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

where they told such stories of the dangers and hard- 
ships thej had suffered on the voyage in the cutter that 
my father's friends considered their predictions fulfilled, 
and gave him up for lost. On the other hand, the loss 
of so many hands, which seemed at the time a great 
misfortune, proved eventuall}^ a most providential oc- 
currence, for they found, on arriving on the coast, that 
their provisions had been so damaged by the continual 
storms that, even with their diminished numbers, they 
were forced to be put on allowance, and if they had had 
their full complement they would have been obliged to 
leave the coast before half completing their cargo, in 
order to escape starvation. The success of the voyage 
was therefore due to this event, which at the time 
seemed a great misfortune. 

One week more of the same experience of working 
up, inch by inch, against continual head-winds, and on 
February 10 they had the satisfaction of seeing the 
north end of the island of Formosa, bearing south, and 
distant ten leagues. 

Thus, after thirty -one days of incessant toil and ex- 
posure, he had accomplished that portion of the voyage 
w^hich had been represented as impracticable, and which, 
v;ith a fair wdnd, could have been made in three or four 
days. The passage across the North Pacific at that in- 
clement season, however, was but a continued scene 
of hardship and suffering. The wind was almost inva- 
riably so violent that they could carry but little sail, 
and the sea so boisterous that the watch on deck never 
escaped a complete drenching, and it was not unfre- 
quently the case that the fire in the caboose was extin- 



ARRIVAL ON THE COAST. 49 

guislied. Before arriving on the coast the precaution 
was taken of putting up a bulwark or screen made of 
liides, which were fastened to stanchions, all round the 
vessel, so that the Indians could not see on board and 
discover the small number of the crew. Then, when 
trading with them, only one canoe w^as allowed to come 
to the vessel at a time, and that at the stern, over which 
all communication was held. On the evening of March 
30 they arrived on the coast, and anchored in a snug 
harbor in Norfolk Sound, and for the next two months 
were busily engaged in traffic with the natives. Only 
one or two vessels had arrived before them, and of these 
they had in one respect the advantage, as the small size 
of the cutter enabled them to navigate the innumerable 
inlets and bays with which the coast is indented — often 
in places where a large ship could not venture — and thus 
secure a great number of skins, singly or in small lots, 
which would not have reached them had they remained 
outside. But, on the other hand, the risk of attack from 
the Indians was proportionally greater, as they more 
than once met with canoes longer than their own vessel. 
It was evident on' various occasions that an attack 
upon the vessel was contemplated, and all sorts of de- 
vices were resorted to by the savages to induce them to 
relax their vigilance, or throw them off their guard, in 
order to secure the coveted opportunity for boarding 
the vessel. But, although the intercourse with them 
was always kind and conciliatory, no reliance was ever 
placed upon their professions of friendship, and no op- 
portunity for the display of their treacherous character 
was ever afforded, although on one occasion they were 
3 



50 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

placed by accident in so perilous a position that nothing 
but a concurrence of favorable circumstances prevented 
tlieir litter destruction. This was after having collected 
a very valuable cargo of furs and nearly expended their 
articles of barter, and when they were seeking a safe 
place to replenish their supplies of wood and water. 

** While steering to the westward with this intention, and going at 
the rate of about two knots, unsuspicious of danger, the vessel sud- 
denly struck a sunken ledge and stopped. Perceiving that she hung 
abaft the midships, and that there was three and a half fathoms un- 
der the bows, we immediately ran all the guns forward and carried 
out an anchor ahead ; but the tide ebbed so rapidly that all our efforts 
to heave her off were ineffectual. We therefore heeled her on the 
side, whence she would be less likely to roll over. At low water the 
position of the vessel was such as to afford little room to hope that 
she could escape bilging. She hung by about four feet amidships, 
having slidden forward as the tide fell, and brought up with the end 
of her bowsprit on the bottom, while her keel formed an angle of 
forty-five degrees with the water-line, the sternpost being fourteen 
or fifteen feet above the rock. This position, combined with a rank 
heel to starboard, made it impossible to stand on deck. We there- 
fore put a number of loaded muskets into the boat, and prepared to 
make such resistance in case of attack as could be made by fifteen 
men crowded into a sixteen-foot boat. Our situation was now one 
of the most painful anxiety, no less from the prospect of losing our 
vessel and the rich cargo we had collected with so much toil, than 
from the apprehension of being discovered in this defenceless state 
by any one of the hostile tribes by whom we were surrounded. A 
canoe of the largest class, with thirty warriors well armed, had left 
us but half an hour before we struck, and were now prevented from 
seeing us only by having passed round a small island. Should the 
vessel bilge, there existed scarcely any other chance for the preser- 
vation of our lives than the precarious one of falling in with some 
ship before we were discovered by Indians. That she would bilge 
if the weather varied in any degree from the perfect calm which then 
prevailed was almost a certainty. More than ten hours were passed 



A CRITICAL SITUATION. 51 

in this agonizing state of suspense, watching the horizon to discover 
if any savages were approaching; the heavens, if there were a cloud 
tliat might chance to ruffle the surface of the water; the vessel, 
whose occasional cracking seemed to warn us of destruction; and 
when the tide began to flow, impatiently observing its apparently 
sluggish advance, while I involuntarily consulted my watch, the 
hands of which seemed to have forgotten to move. '.. 

''At length the water, as the tide rose, having flowed over the 
coamings of the hatches, which had been caulked down in anticipa- 
tion of this event, without any indication of the vessel's lifting, I 
was deliberating on the propriety of cutting away the mast, when we 
perceived that she was beginning to rise. She soon after righted so 
much that we were able to go on board, and at half -past twelve in 
the night we had the indescribable pleasure of seeing her afloat 
again without having received any other apparent injury than the 
loss of a few sheets of copper. 

*'To the perfect calm, smooth water, and uncommon strength of 
our vessel may be attributed our escape from this truly perilous sit- 
uation. 

'*I will not attempt to describe the joy I experienced at this es- 
cape. You may conceive of it by being reminded that on one side 
was presented death in its most horrid form, or a still more horrid 
captivity among the rudest savages; in the other, life, liberty, com- 
petence, and a sight of my friends again. 

*' On the 23d we laid the vessel ashore and cut off the rough cop- 
per, perceived that the keel was considerably bruised and a piece of 
the sheathing under the copper broken, but no material injury done. 
We gave her what repair the time would permit, and hauled off 
when the tide flowed so as to float her. We continued navigating 
the Sound till the 29th, when, having collected nineteen hundred 
skins, besides a good proportion of tails, which is considered a good 
cargo, I concluded to go to Norfolk Sound again and pick up what 
we could in the course of forty-eight hours, and thence to the Char- 
lotte Islands, preparatory to taking our departure from the coast." 

This plan was carried out, and some three hundred 
skins added to their store, the supplies of wood and 
water replenished, and on the 27th 



52 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

'* We put to sea, happy at having so fortunately completed our busi- 
ness, and doubly so at leaving this inhospitable coast. Indeed, the 
criminal who receives a pardon under the gallows could hardly 
feel a greater degree of exultation." 

His return passage to China via the Sandwich Islands 
was chiefly remarkable by the pleasant contrast it af- 
forded to the hardships and dangers to which they had 
so long been exposed. He arrived at Wampoa on the 
15th of September, and thus describes his meeting w^ith 
his friends there : 

*' Several of the gentlemen who had predicted our destruction 
from attempting the voyage at the season we did, presumed, when 
they saw the cutter arrive, that we had failed, which indeed they had 
anticipated, from the arrival in Canton several months before of the 
mutineers whom we had left on the coast of China, and the sad 
stories they had told of hardship, danger, and cruel usage. 

*' One of these gentlemen, on meeting me, was actually beginning 
to express the commiseration he felt for my hard fortune, but per- 
ceiving nothing like dejection in my countenance he stopped to 
make inquiries, and was astonished to learn that we had accom- 
plished the voyage successfully and had a cargo on board that would 
probably produce $60,000. A piece of information which I re- 
ceived on my arrival served to show me in glaring colors my own 
short-sightedness, and almost to make me a convert to the belief 
that * whatever is, is right.' 

** I allude to the loss of the ship Ontario. As I had known before 
arriving at Canton from Batavia that Captain Wheaton was desti- 
tute of oflScers, I had hoped through this means to embark myself 
and property for America free of expense; but only twenty-four 
hours before my arrival he had engaged a chief mate, regretting ex- 
ceedingly that he had not known that I was coming. My own dis- 
appointment was very great, as I knew not which way to turn till 
the offer of the cutter was presented. Had I arrived a few hours 
earlier in Canton I should have embarked in the Ontario, lost all my 
property, probably without insurance, and been left destitute in a 
foreign land." 



SUCCESSFUL TERMINATION. 53 

The sea-otter skins which he had bought of the Ind- 
ians at the rate of eight prime skins in exchange for a 
musket, were sold in Canton for $26 each, and thus tbe 
voyage was completed to the satisfaction of all con- 
cerned. I cannot better conclude my account of it than 
by the relation of a pleasant and unexpected recurrence 
to it in subsequent years. 

Not long after the publication of my father's voyages 
in 1842, he was surprised at receiving by mail a copy 
of the Peoria, Illinois, Register of July 22, 1842^ con- 
taining the following : 

''Yankee Dabing and Enterprise. 

** Under this head we copied a month ago from the Boston Courier 
a notice of a new volume of voyages, by Captain Cleveland of Boston. 

"■ The article met the eye of an old friend of Captain Cleveland, who 
in the fulness of his heart has sent us the following letter, with the 
request that we should put it in editorial form. We prefer, how- 
ever, to publish it just as he sent it. The writer is the respected 
postmaster at Andover, in Henry County, and his own life has been 
little less prolific of adventure than that of his salt-water friend. 
We knew him twenty-five or thirty years ago as the proprietor of 
the Tontine Coffee-house in New York, then one of the principal 
hotels of that city. Like Captain Cleveland, he has counted his 
dollars by the thousand, and is now, at the turn of Fortune's w^heel, 
content to keep a humble post-olfice in a town of twenty houses, 
and to live upon the gains of the Andover grist-mill, which he has. 
recently purchased." 

** Andover, July 7, 1842. 

*' Mr. Davis, — In your paper of 24th June is a sketcS from Cleve- 
land's Voyages, taken from the Boston Courier, Having myself been 
something of a traveller, it is pleasing to me to come across a faith- 
ful narrative, and such I know this to be from my intimate acquaint- 
ance wdtli the writer. Not having heard before of the w^ork, nor 
of Captain Cleveland for many years, I was greatly interested in the 



54 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

sketch, especially as I was a party to some of the transactions de- 
scribed. 

*'The sketch says: 'With the $11,000 in his pocket at the Cape 
of Good Hope, as above stated, and $7000 more, added by some 
associates. Captain Cleveland undertook a voyage from China to the 
northwest coast/ Now, I was one of the * associates* who added 
the $7000, having put in $3000 myself, another friend having ad- 
vanced the same amount, and the remaining $1000 being furnished 
by Youqua, a silk merchant of Canton. Captain Cleveland, on his 
return to Canton, remitted to us, then in the United States, the 
amount of our investment, which netted us over $12,000. Invest- 
ing this in his hands, we next heard of him at Copenhagen, in Den- 
mark, where he had left with a banker $20,000 subject to our or- 
der, with profits still in his hands. The latter remained with him 
as a little capital for further adventure, and was subsequently lost. 

*' As to his losses of $200,000, 1 believe they far exceeded that 
sum, and I have good opportunity of judging. Particulars are un- 
necessary, but I am unwilling not to add that many years after our 
concern was considered completely wound up, vv^e met by accident, 
without the least expectation on my part of receiving any more, at 
which time, Fortune having jilted us, it was low water with both. 

"He volunteered the remark that he had recently very unexpect- 
edly received something from the wreck, and handed me the ac- 
count minutely and proportionally stated, with his accustomed ac- 
curacy, with two hundred and odd dollars. It was at that time a 
pleasant windfall to both, uncertain which needed it most. 

*' These things, with my personal acquaintance with the writer of 
these ' Voyages,' who, through all the hardships of his life, never,! be- 
lieve, drank any kind of drinkable but water — although that must 
often at sea have been unpalatable — warrant me in assuring the pub- 
lic that there can be nothing but unvarnished facts in the narrative; 
and not such stories as are often told by travellers exhibiting more 
ruffle than shirt. Although he is now, as he says, in an office in the 
Boston Custom-House — a position which in New York has proved 
so great a trial of integrity— he will be Richard J. Cleveland, and, rich 
or poor, will be the same man. I am too isolated to have my name 
add anything to its authority. Yours truly, 

''Eben. Townsend." 



MEETING AN OLD FRIEND. 55 

My father, who had heard nothing of his old friend 
for years, and had supposed him dead, was naturally 
much gratified at having thus unearthed liiin. It led to 
a pleasant correspondence and subsequently to a visit 
from Mr. Townsend, wlien my father was living with 
me in Burlington, New Jersey, when the two veterans 
"fought their battles o'er again" with great gusto. 



CHAPTEE lY. 

From Canton to Calcutta, and thence to the Isle of France. — First 
Meeting with William Shaler. — From the Isle of France to Co- 
penhagen. — Purchase of the Brig Lelia Byrd, and Preparations 
for a Yoyage Bound the "World. — The Count de Rouissillon. 

Haying disposed of the cutter and arranged witli the 
purchaser to go in her as passenger, with a cargo of teas, 
etc., to Calcutta, he writes to his father from Canton, 
October 19, 1799, as follows : 

"As I cannot freight for America from hence, I have let part of 
the property, say $21,000, on respondentia for Bengal, whither I am 
bound, and have left $26,000 to be received by a friend here, and 
remitted to me in Bengal, if it can be done advantageously ; if not, 
to endeavor to freight it in fine goods from hence to America.'* 

The voyage to Calcutta was marked by two escapes 
from ruin, and in one of them from certain loss of life 
as well as property, such as no human foresight can 
guard against, and which are denominated as providen- 
tial or accidental, according to the faith or the want of 
it of the narrator. 

On the 5th of l!Tovember, w^hile at anchor close in 
shore in the narrow strait before coming to Malacca — 

** We saw a fleet of eleven Malay proas pass by to the eastward, 
from whose view we supposed ourselves to have been screened by 
the trees and bushes near which we were lying. On perceiving so 
great a number of large proas sailing together, we felt convinced 
they must be pirates, and immediately loaded our guns and pre- 



NARROW ESCAPES. 57 

pared for defence; though conscious that the fearful odds between 
our crew of ten men, and theirs, which probably exceeded a hundred 
to each vessel, left us scarce a ray of hope of successful resistance. 

** We watched their progress, therefore, with that intense interest 
which men may naturally be supposed to feel, whose fortune, liber- 
ty, and life were dependent on the mere chance of their passing by 
without seeing us. To our great joy they did so, and when the sails 
of the last of the fleet were no longer visible from our deck, and we 
realized the certainty of our escape, our feelings of relief were in 
proportion to the danger that had threatened us. 

" On arriving at Malacca, the curiosity of the people was greatly 
excited to know how we had escaped the fleet of pirates which had 
been seen from the town, and when informed they offered us their 
hearty and reiterated congratulations." 

Of their second escape they learned when they took 
the pilot on board off the mouth of the river, who told 
thern that a large Portuguese ship, then in sight, had 
been attacked the day before by a French privateer, 
which she had beaten off. Had they arrived a day 
sooner, therefore, they would have fallen an easy prey, 
and being under English colors the property would have 
been a total loss. 

At Calcutta he was again disappointed in his hope of^ 
finding an opportunity to freight his property on ad- 
vantageous terms to the United States, and after resi-^ 
dence there of three months he writes the following let- 
ter to his father, in which he informs him of his in- 
tended departure; but from prudential motives avoids 
giving him any intimation of the object he had in view : 

" Calcutta, March, 1800. 
*' Your packet by my friend Mr. Gray came to hand, just as Cap- 
tain Wheatland was leaving town to join his ship. I think I acknowl- 
edged the receipt of it, but have no recollection wliat I wrote you. 
3^ 



58 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

'*I have written you from this place by the Grit&rion, Mermaid^ 
Samson, and Perseverance, and given you such an account of the 
property left in China, as vrell as of the voyage in general, that if 
I should take it into my head not to return, you will not be at a loss 
to know how to settle it, and I hope will receive enough to en- 
able you to live with ease for the remainder of your life. 

** However, I am under no apprehensions on this head, and doubt 
not I shall be able to wind up the business to my satisfaction, and 
return in the course of the year 1801. 

' ' If I had not gone so far in my present undertaking that it would 
be making too great a sacrifice to relinquish it, I certainly would do 
60, and take passage with Mr. Gray in the Ulysses, as it is not likely 
I shall again meet with so agreeable an opportunity. I have seen 
none of my countrymen in my travels possessing a greater combina- 
tion of good qualities, and I consider his friendship a valuable ac- 
quisition. 

**I flatter myself I may fall in with Bill and George before I re- 
turn to America. Accounts of the tremendous gale at the Cape of 
Good Hope have reached us, and among tlie most fortunate of the 
unfortunate vessels that wxre caught in it I find is the brig Hannah, 
Captain Wyman. 

' * George has in this instance experienced a more disastrous gale, 
and been witness to a more distressing scene, than perhaps w^as ever 
known there ; but he has yet more dangers to encounter on our bois^ 
terous winter coast. The reflecting on dangers, however, is gener- 
ally as unpleasant as the experience of them. 

*' As I leave all my books and papers here, I have thought proper, 
lest any accident should happen to prevent my getting them again, 
to enclose you copies of all my accounts of the voyage up to the 
present time. 

'*I sent you from hence by the Perseverance, Captain Wheatland,' 
fifty pieces of bandannas in a box marked R. C. This I did fearing 
lest any accident should prevent your receiving the expected prop- 
erty left in China. 

* ■ I leave this to-morrow, and intend returning here again in four 
or five months, when I shall begin to think of turning my face tow- 
ards home. 

** If I meet with success, and a good opportunity offers at that time 



FROM CALCUTTA TO THE ISLE OF FRANCE. 59 

for freighting the property home as safely as if I accompanied it, don't 
be surprised, or think your son crazy, should you hear he had gone 
to Bombay, in order to go overland to the Mediterranean, and thence 
through Italy and France to England. Such a thing may happen, 
though appearances are not much in favor of it; yet I think quite 
as much so as they were of my seeing China when I left Salem. I 
am exceedingly desirous of seeing my friends in Salem, but there 
seems to be a strange fatality attending every motion made to this 
effect. Pleasing myself with the idea that all will turn out for the 
best, time passes as lightly with me as with most people; and I am 
persuaded that few people enjoy a greater share of happiness than 
myself, if you can conceive of there being any happiness in building 
airy castles and pursuing them nearly round the globe till they 
vanish, and then engaging in a fresh pursuit. But enough of airy 
castles : should I meet with a solid one, I'll take care to have it well 
fortified in the latest style of engineering science. 

*' I have become a burgher of the Danish settlement of Frederics- 
nagore, so that I am now a Dane, and must do as the Danes do." 

He had, in fact, determined upon another expedition 
in a cockle-shell, the object of which it was necessary to 
conceal from the authorities of Bengal, who allowed no 
direct intercourse with the Isle of France. 

He had received intelligence that the French priva- 
teers had captured and sent in to that island so many 
prizes that the inference was obvious that a ship could 
be bought there on very advantageous terms : 

'*I determined, therefore, to procure a boat of such diminu- 
tive size as to elude observation, and, at the same time, of so little 
value that the loss upon a re- sale would not be serious. Such a 
one I found at Calcutta, nearly finished, of about twenty-five tons, 
which I made a bargain for, to be completed immediately; to be 
rigged as a pilot-boat, with a mainsail, foresail, and jib; to be 
coppered to the bends, and delivered at the Danish settlement of 
Serampore," 

. The engagement was fulfilled, the vessel put under 



60 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

the Danish flag, iny father became a Danish citizen, 
loaded the boat with only sufficient cargo to put her in 
good trim, and, embarking himself and servant as pas- 
sengers, dropped quietly down the river and made sail 
for the Isle of France. 

The discomfort of such a boat on a voyage of fort}^- 
five days, under a tropical sun, was, of course, very 
great, and he acknowledges himself that " the attempt- 
ing such a passage in such a boat was certainly impru- 
dent. It was not so much owing to ignorance of the 
risk as to that impatience which would not permit ordi- 
nary difficulties to interfere wath tlie pursuit of a favor- 
ite object." 

I may here appropriately introduce an extract from 
a letter of Commodore Biddle to my father, in acknowl- 
edgment of the receipt of a copy of his "ISTarrative:" 

'*Your voyages from Havre to the Cape of Good Hope, from 
Canton to the northwest coast, and from Calcutta to the Isle of 
France, could have been undertaken and performed by none other 
than a New England man. 

*' They reflect credit upon the American name and character.'* 

His arrival excited even more astonishment than had 
been displayed at the Cape of Good Hope when he 
landed there from a vessel nearly double the size of this 
one. 

A crowd followed him when he landed and proceeded 
to report to the governor; and not suspecting that he un- 
derstood French, expressed freely their surprise and their 
conjectures as to his probable object. He now had the 
opportunity to deliver the despatches with which he 
had been intrusted by the Directory two years pre- 



WILLIAM SHALER. 61 

vious, and to explain the cause of the long delay ; and 
although they were, of course, no longer of any value, 
they served the purpose of a favorable introduction, and 
secured for him the courtesies which are always so ac- 
ceptable in a foreign land. 

The letter which follows, from Copenhagen, wTitten 
the year after, gives a better sketch than I could hope 
to do of his experiences; and the only item on which I 
wish to oflFer any remark is the incidental mention of 
his having made the acquaintance, while at the Isle of 
France, of William Shaler, which acquaintance was 
destined to have so important an influence on his sub- 
sequent life that it merits more than a passing notice. 

Mr. Shaler was a man of rare intellectual power, and 
of such unflinching courage, determined will, and kingly 
presence, as seemed to adapt him morally and physically 
to a leading position among his fellow-men. Of the 
qualities I have enumerated he gave evidence during 
his residence in Algiers, where he held the position** of 
consul-general of the United States for many years, and 
rendered very important services to his government^ 
and countrymen while in that capacity. 

On one occasion, when a certain tribe of Arabs were 
in rebellion, the Dey issued an order for the arrest and 
imprisonment of every member of the tribe who hap- 
pened to be in the city. The household servants of the 
foreign consuls in Algiers were almost exclusively of 
this tribe, and notice of the requisition for their sur- 
render was at once sent to all the consulates. 

Some of the consuls made no opposition to the decree ; 
others paid off and discharged their servants, leaving 



62 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

them to their fate. The British consul endeavored to 
protect his premises, but his doors were forced and his 
servants dragged out and imprisoned. 

Every possible effort was made to induce Mr. Shaler 
to comply with the demand, but he insisted upon main- 
taining the dignity of his flag; and when the emissaries 
of the dey made their appearance, coolly informed them 
that they could only enter his premises over his body. 

He carried his point, and not only saved his servants 
from imprisonment and, possibly, death, but was ever 
after treated with distinguished respect and considera- 
tion by the dey. 

During the subsequent attack on the city by the Brit- 
ish fleet, under Lord Exmouth, the influence he had 
acquired enabled him to render very valuable diplomatic 
service in the protection of English and other Christian 
interests. 

His ''Sketches of Algiers," published in Boston, in 
1826, contains a very interesting account of the country 
and its social condition under Moorish rule, and also a 
graphic description of the capture of the city by Lord 
Exmouth. 

Of all men of distinguished personal appearance 
whom I have had the good-fortune to meet — not even 
excepting Daniel Webster — I have never seen one 
whose aspect seemed to me so impressive, or so truly 
one of majestic dignity, as Mr. Shaler's, and his stern 
gray eye had an indescribable expression of firmness 
and resolution which no man would care to encounter 
in opposition. 

A gentleman who resided in a New England country- 



A LIFE-LONG FRIEND. 63 

town, wliich for a time was Mr. Slialer's home, gave 
me once a humorous account of the effect of his appear- 
ance upon the crowd assembled at the village post-oflBce 
to wait the assortment of the mail. 

''They would fall back," said he, "and open to the 
right and left, as if a lion had walked in at the door.'' 

He was at heart a man of warm and generous nature, 
fond of reading and hard study, affable and pleasant 
with congenial spirits, but impatient with frivolous and 
commonplace people. The acquaintance which began 
iat the Isle of France ripened into such a feeling of 
warm attachment and implicit confidence in each other 
as rarely exists even between those who are connected 
by ties of blood, and this friendship continued through 
life. 

The following, from my father's narrative, on the oc- 
casion of their separating after a long voyage together, 
bears evidence to this fact : 

*' The parting here from ray long-tried, mucli-esteemed, and affec- 
tionate friend Shaler was not unattended with painful emotions. 
We had shared abundantly in those dangers, toils, and anxieties no 
less than in those pleasures and recreations which combine so 
forcibly to cement the bonds of friendship. 

* * * * ** ** 

*'The many instances that had come within our observation of 
intimate friends becoming alienated, from differing in opinion on 
the merest trifles, had suggested to us the propriety of pondering 
well on our ability to sustain harmoniously the alliance we contem- 
plated in affairs of greater importance. Nothing short of our mu- 
tual experience of each other's temper and disposition could justify 
the presumption implied of the power to maintain the harmony re- 
quired in a voyage of ordinary character between two persons 
equally interested in the property, equally competent to take charge 



64 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

of the nautical and mercantile part of the business, and on a perfect 
footing of equality in everything relating to the management of the 
ship, as well as that of the cargo. But in an enterprise involving so 
much difficulty and danger, so much to* perplex and irritate, with 
so little success to cheer the spirits and promote equanimity of 
temper, that we should be able to accomplish it without a rupture is 
surprising; how much more so, then, that we never had an angry 
dispute, and parted with feelings of affection increased by the very 
diflSculties and embarrassments we had encountered together." 

This account of Mr. Slialer has filled a greater space 

than I had anticipated. The following is my father's 

letter, in which, as I have said, he is first mentioned. 

It will be seen by the explanation given in it that 

he had previously been restrained from writing by 

the same prudential motives w^hich affected him at 

Calcutta. 

'* Copenhagen, June 22, 1801. 

''I am now, as you will perceive, at the Danish capital, from 
whence (in conformity with my usual custom) I propose to give jou. 
a sketch of my proceedings since I last wrote you from the capital 
of the British empire in India. 

**I think, on my leaving India, you had no positive informa- 
tion as to my destination by any of my letters from there; and I am 
persuaded you will see the necessity which existed for the great- 
est circumspection in my operations, for had my letters been inter- 
cepted by a ship of either of the belligerent powers, and myself af- 
terwards fallen into their hands, the consequences would probably 
have been an end of the voyage. That you might not, however, 
remain entirely in the dark respecting them, I communicated my 
plan to Mr.Winthrop Gray, who promised to disclose it to you ; but, 
alas! he lived not to perform this promise. I was grieved on hear- 
ing of the sad accident that befell him, and though my acquaintance 
with him was not of long st-^anding, it was sufficiently so to give 
birth to a real friendship for him. I sincerely wish that many who 
make much more profession of rigid morals were as incapable as he 
was of a mean or dishonest action. 



LETTER FROM COPENHAGEN. 65 

**My object in going to the Isle of France was to purchase prize 
goods or ships, with which to return to India. From a knowledge 
of the great success of the privateers, and information (which I had 
reason to suppose was correct) that no Danes had gone from Tran- 
quebar to make purchases, I had but little doubt that I should be 
able to wind up my voyage at Calcutta in three or four months 
from the time of my departure, and with a handsome profit; and, 
should I possibly be disappointed in this, that the American trade 
with France and her colonics would soon be open, and I should 
readily find an opportunity of freighting my property to America. 
In both these calculations I was mistaken, for, on my arrival, I 
found that the sales were finished, and the privateers on the point 
of sailing on another cruise, so that nothing could be expected from 
them for several months. I therefore decided on the second plan, 
in daily expectation of the arrival of Americans, for I was now as- 
sured by an arrival from France that all differences between the two 
republics were amicably adjusted. I therefore went down to Bour- 
bon in expectation of purchasing my coffee lower and more readily 
than at Mauritius. But the inhabitants had heard of the arrival of 
the American from France, which, in conjunction with my arrival 
there, led them to suppose that their produce would soon rise in 
value, and therefore (as in general they are not in want) they would 
not sell at any price. After remaining a fortnight without doing 
anything I returned to Mauritius, where, in longing expectation of 
the arrival of Americans, and at times doubting whether the}^ w^ould 
come,finding it impossible to fit out a vessel for America before we 
knew that the intercourse was open, and feeling extreme repugnance 
at the thought of returning to India without doing anything, I w^ait- 
ed day after day and month after month with as much impatience 
as any prisoner ever experienced in the Bastile. To have remained 
in such a state of inactivity in a more pleasant country would not 
have been agreeable, but here everything concurred to cause the 
time to wear so heavily away that the ten months I was detained 
appear as long as all the rest of the time I have been from home. 
You will naturally suppose that the annoyance some of their priva- 
teers have met with from our armed merchantmen has much irri- 
tated, and in many instances influenced, them in the condemning 
of unarmed vessels which have been sent in. 



66 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

"Americans are reproached with ingratitude towards France and 
partiality for the English, and myself among the few who were 
there; for, although I entered as a Dane, it was soon discovered that 
I was an American. Nor did I try to conceal it, but, on the contra- 
ry, condemned the measures of the French government towards 
America wherever I heard them discussed, and sometimes (though 
rarely) found an honest Frenchman wiio was of my opinion, but he 
was a planter, and the planters in general have not a much more 
exalted opinion of the integrity of the merchants than I have. To 
brand any set of men with the epithet of rogue is rather harsh, but, 
upon my word, I do not think it can be more justly applied to the 
inhabitants of Botany Bay than to the merchants of Mauritius ; norX 
was our countryman. Captain Ingraham (who published a list of 
these gentry in a Boston paper), much out of the way as it respects 
truth, but a good deal in point of prudence; for this paper, branding 
a number of them with the epithet of rogue, villain, etc. , had like to 
have caused serious trouble to the few Americans who were there. 
On the day this paper was produced on 'Change the only American 
who happened to be present was S. Minot, and he was so grossly in- 
sulted by one of these censured citoyens (a Mr. Sevenne) that a duel 
was the consequence ; but, although they fought at only five paces, 
no other mischief arose than the Frenchman's receiving a ball in the 
arm, which laid him by for a few weeks. Whether he is more or 
less a rogue since than before this affair I will not pretend to decide, 
but leave it to those who may be so unfortunate as to have any trans- 
actions with him, and return to my own affairs. 

"In December I purchased and expedited a ship for Calcutta for 
account of Mr. White, of Boston, who was largely concerned in my 
speculation, and was waiting my return there; and early in January 
I contracted (in conjunction with a Mr, Shaler, of Connecticut) with 
a Danish captain to freight on board his ship seven thousand bags 
of coffee, on condition that he should deliver us six thousand bags 
in Copenhagen. We were not to pay any primage or average, and 
were to have passage for ourselves and servants gratis, except pay- 
ing a proportion of cabin stores. 

"These were certainly very advantageous terms, and such as only 
his peculiar situation induced him to accept, as he had purchased a 
large ship at a moderate price, had not half property enough to load 



LETTER FROM COPENHAGEN. 67 

lier, and could not procure freight from any other quarter. In ad- 
dition to the freight being low, it was one of the finest ships that I 
have ever sailed on — an East India Company's ship of nine hundred 
tons' burden, on her first voyage, and although, when captured, she 
carried between decks twenty 18-pounders, and six 9-pounders on 
the quarter-deck, and had on board, in sailors and soldiers, three 
hundred and fifty men, she was taken by boarding by the celebrated 
Surcouffe in the Conflance privateer of twenty guns and one hun- 
dred and fifty men. Nor was she taken by surprise, but rather 
from the Englishman's too great confidence in his own strength and 
contempt for that of his enemy. Such a bold and successful at- 
tempt has not i)erhaps its equal in the pages of history. Surcouffe 
relates with humor the story of an English major-general who was 
a passenger on board, and who, after the ship had surrendered, 
came up from below (where he had stowed himself with the lady 
passengers during the action) and presented his sword to him; but 
Surcouffe, instead of receiving it, told him he might keep it, as he 
was sure it was in harmless hands; nor did he think it worth while 
to keep him a prisoner, but let him go with the other passengers. 

'* But what has this to do with my affairs, of which I sat down to 
give you a detail, before which, however, I must observe that, 
among many instances of the depravity, or, rather, weakness, of this 
government, in suffering the privateers to send in, and their courts 
to condemn, neutrals on the most frivolous pretences, they have in 
no instance been guilty of a more glaring piece of villainy than in 
the condemnation of the brig Traveller, of Boston, and her cargo of 
$110,000 specie, belonging to Mr. Joseph Lee, Jr., and the Messrs. 
Williams, of Boston. 

"We left the Mauritius on the 21st of March, and, after one of 
the pleasantest and quickest passages I ever experienced, arrived at 
Christiansand, Norway, on the 11th instant — only eighty-two days. 
We came along in the most perfect serenity, having heard nothing 
of any disturbance between the English and Danes, and were pursu- 
ing our course for Copenhagen when we spoke a Danish coasting 
vessel a few miles from the entrance to Christiansand, and were 
surprised with the intelligence that war had been declared, and that 
we could not proceed farther towards Elsinore without being in- 
tercepted by an English cruiser. As we conceived that some time 



y 



68 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

must elapse before these diiferences could be adjusted, and, conse- 
quently, that the ship must necessarily remain where she was, Mr. 
Shaler and I remained but two days and then took passage for Ny- 
bourg, a pretty town on the island of Fyen, where we arrived the 
third day after leaving Norway. From here we crossed to Corseur, 
on the western part of Zealand, where we slept, and next morning 
took post-horses for Copenhagen, w^hcre we arrived at night, having 
travelled through a most delightful country, level, and everywhere 
in the highest state of cultivation. You will easily conceive how 
gratifying to the sight such a country must be to one who has been 
for so long a time either in a country of barbarians, where the ice 
remains all the year round, or in the torrid zone, where vegetation 
is almost entirely burned up, and where it is imprudent to go out of 
the house at noonday. 

*'If I had understood the language I should almost have fancied 
myself in my native country; but we met with but one person who 
could speak French, and none that could speak English, on the 
road, so that we were forced to talk by signs, except to the man who 
spoke French. He was a w^ell-dressed old gentleman of upward of 
seventy, who made up for all deficiencies in chat. His curiosity was 
as much excited by my honest negro servant as was that of any of 
the peasants of the country, and he even asked how long he had 
been caught and tamed, and was much surprised to learn that he 
was a native of America and had never been wild. My first pursuit 
on arriving here was to inquire for a Salem vessel, and I soon had 
the pleasure of seeing William Orne, Jr.^ from whom I learned that 
all my friends were alive and w^ell but a few days ago; and this, you 
will conceive, was a great relief to me, for, though I sought for 
news, I dreaded to hear what it might be. 

*'It may yet be fifteen or twenty days before the arrival of our 
ship at this place, so that it is very uncertain when I shall be able 
to close my business here ; but, as I have for the concern property 
worth here about $60,000 net, and am myself the largest proprietor, 
and as this property is now safe, I think you cannot want for money 
even if the China adventure did not yield so much as I calculated 
on «vhen I wrote you from Calcutta. I hope, however, it gave 
you a supply, besides paying my debts; but, whether it did or 
not, or whether it arrived safe or was lost, money you must have. 



AT COPENHAGEN. 69 

and as soon as I can conveniently make you a remittance I shall 
do so. 

**I have given you a long, faithful, and perhaps tedious narrative 
of my proceedings thus far. Of my next movements you will be 
regularly advised, but do not impute it to any want of affection if 
they should not be towards home." 

The next letter from Copenhagen, a few days later, 
gives no definite account of his plans, and thencefor- 
ward my record of his movements must be made np 
from his " Journal," as no more letters have been pre- 
served, and probably none were written, as the oppor- 
tunities for transmission from the ports he next visited 
must have been extremely rare. 

*' Copenhagen, July 5, 1801. 

** Since writing you of my arrival here, to wear off the time w^hile 
waiting for our ship, I have made a pleasant journey on this island, 
in company with two American gentlemen. Our first visit was to 
Roschild, about twenty English miles from hence. In the cathedral 
of this place are buried all the deceased kings, queens, etc., of Den- 
mark, as far back as seven hundred years. 

"From thence we went to Fredericsburg, a very ancient and su- 
perb palace, where we saw many fine pieces of sculpture, paintings, 
etc. Thence to the cannon-foundery at Fredericswork, belonging 
to a prince of Hesse. After being shown every part of the foun- 
dery and the powder-works, we proceeded to Fiedenvert, where there 
is a beautiful palace, built by the late Juliana Maria, mother to the 
present king, into every apartment of which we were shown, and, 
consequently, saw all the fine furniture and paintings. From thence 
we went to Elsinore, where one of our party left us, and crossed 
over to Sweden, on his way to Russia, and the other returned with 
me to Copenhagen, after an absence of four days, much improved, 
as you will imagine. For my own part, I have become so great a 
connoisseur in pictures that — as you will perceive — I have been ^ble 
to recollect the names of the towns and palaces in which they are to 
be seen. I often think, on my various excursions, of the booby mak- 



70 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

ing the tour of Europe, as described iu the Spectator. Pray don't 
be disappointed if I should be able to give you no better account of 
the manners, customs, government, laws, public edifices, and rare 
curiosities which I have seen. 

''The morning after my return from this excursion I was agree- 
ably surprised at meeting my old friend. Captain Silsbee. The time 
elapsed since I have seen him seems to have made very little altera- 
tion in his appearance, and he seems the same good fellow with 
whom I made my first voyages. I do not think Fortune could have 
bestowed her favors on a more deserving object. He urges me much 
to return to America, and offers me a passage in his ship. This I 
would gladly accept, but I have long had a plan in view, which I 
am very anxious to carry into execution, and which will depend 
entirely upon the arrival of our ship from Norway. If she should 
not arrive within the present month, I shall return to America im- 
mediately on settling my affairs here. If she should arrive within 
the month, it is probable I shall make another trip around the world, 
of which you shall be advised. 

/'I regret, and am surprised, that you should have been un- 
easy at not hearing from me from the Mauritius. The difficulty, as 
well as danger, of forwarding letters while on such a speculative 
adventure, where the property was entirely masked, ought to have 
occurred to you, and your knowledge of my extreme caution and 
dislike of running into danger would, I thought, have authorized 
me to have undertaken more hazardous expeditions without alarm- 
ing you," 

The plan to which he alludes was one which he and 
Mr. Shaler had discussed together on their passage from 
tlie Isle of France, of a trading voj^age to the west coast 
of South America, and probably round the world, and 
had so far agreed upon that its execution was dependent 
solely upon their meeting with a suitable vessel for their 
purpose. 

The cargo of coffee they had bronght from the Isle of 
France was sold at a handsome profit, and he received, 



PURCHASE OF BRIG "LELIA BYRD." 71 

also, very satisfactory accounts of the proceeds of that 
portion of his property which had been shipped to Amer- 
ica, so that he not only felt free from anxiety on his 
own account, but had the satisfaction of knowing that 
he had fully provided for his father's wants, and had 
ministered bountifully to the comfort of other relatives 
to whom he was bound by ties of gratitude and affec- 
tion. 

Finding it impossible to procure a suitable vessel at 
Copenhagen, they w^ent to Hamburg, where they ac- 
complished their object by the purchase of the brig 
Lelia Byrd^ of Portsmouth, Ya., a stanch, fast-sailing 
vessel of one hundred and seventy-five tons, with good 
capacity for carrying, and very comfortable accommo- 
dations. 

While Mr. Shaler went to Bordeaux to attend to 
some business of his own, my father remained in Ham- 
burg to supervise the coppering and repairing of the 
vessel, which was accomplished, and the cargo shipped, 
by the time of his return, at the end of September. As 
their partnership was, in all respects, one of perfect 
equality, the nominal position of captain — which it was 
necessary, for form's sake, that one of them should as- 
sume- — was decided in favor of Mr. Shaler by tossing a 
copper, and my father, therefore, appeared on the ship's 
papers as supercargo. 

Before they were ready for sea, liowever, the objects 
which had formed the chief incentive to the prosecution 
of the voyage were defeated by the sudden and unex- 
pected termination of the war between France and Eng- 
land by the Treaty of Amiens. The commerce of Spain 



72 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

with her colonies would now be renewed, and, by the 
regular introduction of the manufactures of Europe, the 
hitherto exorbitant prices on which they had counted as 
a compensation for their efforts would be at once re- 
duced. It was obvious, therefore, that a voyage to Chili 
and Peru could now be made only under the most dis- 
couraging auspices, as the same cause which operated 
to enable the inhabitants to supply themselves with 
manufactures would also greatly increase the difficulty 
and danger which foreigners must encounter in endeav- 
oring to elude the proverbial jealousy of Spain of out- 
side intrusion on her colonial commerce. The business, 
however, had advanced so far that a resale of the vessel 
and cargo could not bo effected except at great loss, and 
they could not reconcile themselves to the abandonment 
of the voyage. 

Meantime, during their residence in Hamburg, they 
had become acquainted with the Count de Kouissillon, 
a young Polish nobleman, who had fought for the lib- 
erty of his country as an aide-de-camp of Kosciusko, and, 
being one of the proscribed, was living in Hamburg on 
very slender means, and without occupation. He was 
the descendant of an ancient noble family. He pos- 
sessed a powerful intellect, and gave evidence that great 
care had been exercised in its cultivation. His acquire- 
ments in mathematics, in astronomy, music, and draw- 
ing were very respectable, and there was scarcely a 
European language with which he was not familiar. 
For these attainments he was not less indebted to his 
fine natural powers than to an untiring industry, which 
was so habitual tliat he seemed to grudge a moment's 



THE COUNT DE ROUISSILLON. 73 

time that was passed without adding something to his 
stock of knowledge. 

Perceiving the very great addition to their own en- 
joyment which w^onld be derived from the companion- 
ship of so agreeable a young man — for they were all 
under thirty — they invited him to accompany them, 
simply as a travelling companion. He had never been 
at sea, and the prospect of a rambling voyage round the 
world to a man like him, who had been reared in the 
interior of a continent, oflFered such attractions that he 
accepted the invitation without hesitation and with 
w^arm expressions of gratification and delight. 
' Looking back over the lapse of eighty years, and re- 
calling the circumstances of the period and the character 
and position of the young men by whom this enterprise 
was undertaken, the history of the voyage on w^hich 
they were now embarking seems more like the concep- 
tion of a poet's imagination than the simple narrative 
of a commercial enterprise. 

It is difficult, at this day, when we n6t only have full 
and minute descriptions of every port and country, but 
can hold instant intercourse with the most remote re- 
gions of the globe, to realize the sense of mysterious 
uncertainty with which those portions w^ere then re- 
garded which were out of the frequented channels of 
commerce, and especially those that were guarded by 
such jealous watchfulness of foreign flags as was then 
considered an essential element of national polity. The 
starting forth upon a trading voyage of such a character 
as this had, therefore, all the charm of uncertainty which 
comprises the chief attraction of a tale of adventure, and 
4 



'74 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

the personal character of the chief actors was in keeping 
with that of the enterprise, w^hich would neither have 
been conceived nor attempted by men of everyday mould. 

My father's course, from the time of his starting out 
from Havre, four years previous, liad been marked by 
such sagacity in the conception and such energy and 
fearlessness in the execution of the enterprises he had 
undertaken as indicate a rare combination of mental 
and physical attainments. Their exercise had secured 
the object at which they aimed, and had relieved him 
from the painful anxiety he had felt, and which his let- 
ters so often expressed, lest his father should be in 
want. 

He had provided for him, and gained for himself a 
fortune which would have been ample for the gratifica- 
tion of his simple tastes had he abandoned the further 
prosecution of such exciting adventure as he had here- 
tofore pursued. But a life of quiet ease and luxury 
w'as inconsistent with the demands of such a spirit as 
his, and the union of his own fortune with that of one 
so fully in sympathy w^itli him as his friend Shaler 
served, doubtless, to stimulate both of them to the 
achievement of enterprises of greater pith and moment 
than either would have attempted alone. 

The fact of their winning the friendship of so accom- 
plished a man as the Count de Eouissillon, the mutual 
appreciation of the value of the intellectual enjoyment 
of each other's society which was manifested by the in- 
vitation and its acceptance, and the subsequent relations 
of harmony and confidence which were maintained be- 
tween the three throughout the extended period of trj^- 



CHARACTER OF YOYAGi;. 75 

ing experiences to which they were subjected, afford ev- 
idences of such characteristics in each as can but excite 
surprise and admiration, and serve to lift the whole en- 
terprise above the domain of a mere trading voyage, 
and impart to it a halo of attractive interest which may 
be justly termed poetic. 



CHAPTER V. 

1803, 1804. 

Voyage of tlie Lelia Byrd. — Adventures in Chili and on the Coast 
of California. — Thence to the Sandwich Islands and China, and 
thence in the Alert to Boston. 

This voyage of the Lelia Byrd occupied the ensuing 
two and a half years. If any letters were received from 
him during its prosecution they have not been pre- 
served, and the probability is that no opportunity was 
offered him for communicating with his friends. His 
own account of it, as given in his narrative, is so com- 
plete, and comprises details of such interest, that if I 
were to attempt its repetition I should transfer the whole 
of it to these pages. But I prefer to touch only upon 
the leading incidents as given in his daily journal, and 
preserve the consecutive order of events in the history 
of his life. 

While yet in the river Elbe, and lying at anchor at 
Gliickstadt, they had a very narrow escape from de- 
struction by a storm which caused very great damage 
to the shipping. One cable parted, and the pilot who 
was on board was very urgent to cut away the masts 
to prevent being driven on tlie pier heads ; but to this 
they would not consent, and were finally held by the 
bower anchor's catching in the one they had lost, and es- 
caped with the loss of the stern boat torn from the davits. 



FROM CUXHAYEN TO RIO JANEIRO. 77 

Tliey sailed from Ciixhaven on the 8tli of ISToveinber, 
1801, in company with a dozen ships and brigs, and 
soon had an opportunity of discovering the superiority 
of their vessel, as at the end of four hours only two of 
the fleet were visible astern from their decks. 

Touching at the Canary Islands for fresh provisions, 
they continued their course across the Atlantic, and ar- 
rived at Rio Janeiro, January 2, 1802 : 

''Next morning we were visited with much formality by the mu- 
nicipal authorities, accompanied by an interpreter, to ascertain the 
condition of our vessel, and know our wants, in order that, from their 
report to superior authority, it might be decided how long we should 
be permitted to remain in port. 

* ' Aware of the jealousy of the government towards all foreigners, 
and their practice of rigidly enforcing the law for the exclusion of 
any other flag than their own except in cases of emergency, we pre- 
sumed the time granted us would be very limited, and were, there- 
fore, very well satisfied on being informed that the viceroy permitted 
us to remain eight days. This was ample time to fill our water- 
casks, to procure a supply of stock, vegetables, and fruit, and to 
ascertain if it were possible to dispose of our cargo to any of the 
traders who were here from the river Platte," 

They were allowed to go on shore only when accom- 
panied by a soldier ; but, as there was no limit fixed to 
their rambles, they visited all the most attractive points, 
and spent one evening at the theatre, where the patience 
of the audience was tried by the delay of the viceroy, 
as the curtain could not rise till his arrival. When he 
at length appeared the whole audience rose to greet 
him, and performances began with a five-act comedy 
and concluded with a ballet. 

The most interesting incident which occurred during 



78 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

their stay, however, was a visit paid by Mr. Roiiissillon 
and my father to the Convent of the Benedictines. See- 
ing one of the monks, as they were looking at the out- 
side of the building, Rouissillon addressed him in Italian, 
and finding he could thus communicate w^ith him asked 
permission to examine the interior, which was courte- 
ously granted, and they were escorted to a gorgeouslj^ 
furnished chapel, and thence to the dining-room and 
other apartments. Tliey at lengtli asked to see the li- 
brary, which seemed to excite surprise as being an un- 
usual request; but they were taken without hesitation 
to a pleasant room, the windows of wliich overlooked 
the bay, where they found a collection of ten or twelve 
thousand volumes, mostly in French, Italian, and Latin, 
which they examined with interest. The monk who ac- 
companied them was much astonished with the eager- 
ness of their examination, and with Kouissillon's famil- 
iarity with man^^ of the works, and remarked upon it to 
one of the brethren as a mortifying contrast to the ig- 
norance and indifference of their own countrymen. 

Finding no opportunity to dispose of their cargo, they 
took their departure on the 10th of January, came in 
sight of Cape Horn on the 7th of February, and for a 
week after were contending with the boisterous and 
tempestuous weather usual in that region, and arrived 
at Valparaiso on the 24th of February. 

*' On entering the Bay of Valparaiso we were boarded by a naval 
officer from a guardacosta, who desired us not to cast anchor till the 
captain had presented himself to the governor and obtained permis- 
sion. Consequently, while Mr. Shaler accompanied this officer to 
the governor, we lay off and on in the bay. More than an hour 



AT VALPARAISO. 79 

elapsed before his return with permission to anchor, and to remain 
till a reply could be received from the captain-general at Santiago 
to our request for leave to supply our wants, for which a despatch 
was to be forwarded immediately. 

'* We were surprised to find no less than four American vessels 
lying here, and no less mortified than surprised, and in some degree 
alarmed for our own safety, to find them all under arrest on differ- 
ent pretexts. 

"Yet while we violated no law and required no other than the 
privileges secured to us by treaty we could not believe that we should 
be molested. 

**0n the third day after the messenger had been despatched to 
the captain-general a reply was received from him, the purport of 
which was, that our passage had been so good that we could not bo 
in want of provisions, if we had laid in such a supply as we ought 
to have done before leaving Europe. 

**But if it were otherwise, and our wants were as urgent as we 
represented, the mode by which we proposed paying for them, by a 
bill on Paris, was inadmissible; and, therefore, that it was his excel- 
lency's order that we should leave the port at the expiration of 
twenty-four hours after receiving this notice. 

**0n remonstrating with the governor and representing to him 
the inhumanity of driving us to sea while in possession of so small 
a supply of the necessaries of life, he very reluctantly consented to 
our remaining over another post, and even promised to make a more 
favorable report on the urgency of our necessities than he had done. 
But as the order to leave was reiterated, we doubted his having per- 
formed his promise, and, tlierefore, determined to write directly to 
the captain-general. 

*'In conformity with this decision Mr. Shaler addressed a letter 
in Spanish to the captain-general, expressing his surprise at the or- 
der for our departure without affording us the supplies which were 
indispensable, and for which provision had been made by treaty, 
and * presuming that his excellency's intentions had been miscon- 
ceived by the governor, he had ventured to disobey the order, and 
remain in port till the reception of his excellency's reply/ 

** A prompt and very polite answer was received, granting us per- 
mission to supply ourselves with everything we desired; and, what 



80 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

was very extraordinary, giving us further permission, •wliicli had not 
been asked, of selling so much of the cargo as would be sufficient to 
pay for the supplies. After which he desired we would leave the 
port immediately, and added that if we entered any other port we 
should be treated as contrabandists." 

The above is quoted from tlie piiblislied narrative. 
I give the account of subsequent events as described 
in his journal, written at the time : 

*'This indulgence on the part of his excellency relieved us from 
our embarrassments; and on Saturday, 27th of March, having our 
provisions all engaged and part on board, we sent ashore in the 
morning twenty-eight pieces of platillas to pay for them, and they 
were immediately sold by the governor at $18 apiece and the money 
deposited with the commandant. Our intention was to take off the 
rest of our provisions in the afternoon, settle our accounts the next 
day, and then proceed to sea. But the same afternoon began the 
affair of the ship Hazard of Providence, Captain Eowan, as follows : 

'* The governor had demanded that Captain Kowan should deliver 
up five hundred muskets, which it appeared were on board the ship, 
and which, as they were laden in Holland and bound to the north- 
west coast of America, he supposed did not come under Art. 10 of 
the treaty, and, therefore, determined not to comply with the de- 
mand. Of this determination the aide-de-camp of the governor was 
informed several days before in my presence. 

**It is evident that the governor expected opposition, as he ap- 
proached the ship in a launch with about twenty soldiers, and see- 
ing that Captain Rowan was prepared to make resistance he lay by 
at a little distance, and hailed to know if he might come alongside 
with safety; to which Captain Eowan replied that he should be hap- 
py to be honored with his company, but that he would not permit 
the soldiers to come on board. The governor then went on board 
and demanded the arms, which Captain Eowan refused, at the same 
time hoisting his colors and observing that they were his* protection 
and were not to be insulted. 

*'Thi3 firmness no doubt astonished the governor, and he soon 
went ashore, apparently much mortified, as he immediately ordered 



DIFFICULTY WITH THE GOYERNOE. 81 

every American merchant then on shore to be shut up in the castle; 
hoisted the colors at the fort, and ordered a large merchant ship then 
in the road (which mounted eighteen heavy cannon between decks) 
to hoist the pennant, bring her broadside to bear on the Hazard (by 
getting a spring on his cable), and order him to surrender on pain 
of being sunk. To these threats Captain Eowan replied that they 
might fire if they pleased, and nailed his colors to the mast, and, as 
the governor did not choose to put his threats into execution, things 
remained in statu quo, 

** Shaler, Eouissillon, and myself being on shore, were arrested and 
sent to the castle, and w^ere thus prevented from putting to sea as 
w^e had intended. In the evening we wrote to the governor request- 
ing to be provided with something to eat and with beds. Our let- 
ter was returned unopened, and it was not till twelve o'clock the 
next day, and after passing a most uncomfortable night, annoyed by 
innumerable fleas, that any attention was paid to us. We were then 
informed by a verbal message from his excellency that we were at 
liberty to go on board our ship. We were unwilling to accept this 
liberty until an apology should be made for the offence, and we 
finally agreed that Shaler, being the master of the vessel, should re- 
main in prison. We accordingly sent him a bed and provisions, 
and then asked permission of the governor to send an express to the 
captain-general, which he refused, asking at the same time why we 
did not go to sea; to which we replied that we wanted satisfaction 
for being unjustly imprisoned and ill-treated, and that our captain 
did not intend to leave the prison till he was informed why he was 
put in. On Monday I was passing the government house, when the 
governor called me and asked if I was not second in command, and 
on my replying in the affirmative, he ordered me to go on board and 
go to sea. I answered that I could not go without my captain. He 
then told me he would seize the brig; to which I replied that we w^ere 
already prisoners, which he denied. I then again asked permission 
to send a courier to the capital and was again refused. AlthouglT^ 
the ostensible reason of our refusing to go to sea was to obtain sat- 
isfaction for the outrage to which we had been subjected, the real 
cause of our delay was the hope that we might be of service to 
Rowan. 

*'In the evening the governor's courier returned from the capital, 
4^ 



82 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

bringing a letter from the captain-general to Captain Rowan, desir- 
ing him to deliver up the arms making part of his cargo, and make 
a second declaration respecting their lading. This order, from the 
commander-in-chief, was complied with without hesitation, first by 
delivering the arms, and, second, by referring the governor to his 
first declaration; at the same time sending (by the supercargo) the 
certificate, signed by the controller of customs at Amsterdam, of 
their being laden there. Captain Rowan had now no idea of mak- 
ing further resistance, but intended pursuing the business legally; 
nor did he consider the governor's advice to him to come on shore 
in the light of an order. 

*'Rouissillon was with the governor till past seven o'clock Wed- 
nesday evening, and was surprised to hear him say that if Captain 
R. did not come on shore voluntarily he intended to use force to 
compel him. 

**Rouissillon replied that force would be unnecessary, as Captain 
Rowan thought no longer of making any resistance; and when he 
came off we went together on board the Hazard, and, on informing 
Rowan of the governor's intention, he said at once he would go on 
shore in the morning, as it was too late to go on shore that night. 
But precisely at eight o'clock next morning (which was two hours 
before Americans were permitted to go on shore) a band of upwards 
of two hundred armed brigands, composed of the crews of Spanish 
vessels, boarded the Hazard, and took her, from an unarmed crew 
of twenty-three men, who supposed themselves in safety. 

*'And this was done by order of the governor, who stood on 
shore opposite the vessel, and was a witness to the horrid scene of 
assassination and rax)ine that followed. Captain Rowan's life was 
saved by the humanity of the captain of a Spanish brig, w^ho got 
into the cabin in advance of the rabble — as he had not time to save 
himself, as the other officers had done, by retreating to the lazaretto. 
The plunder w^hich ensued for the remainder of the day, and the 
following night, was such as to lighten the ship nearly a foot. Nor 
were the officers of rank backward in taking part in the pillage; and 
the custom-house guards, far from preventing, were as eager as the 
rest in the work of robbery. 

*' With indignation I w^ent immediately after to the governor, to 
again demand permission to send an express to Santiago, when he 



CORRESPOXDENCE WITH THE CAPTAIN-GENERAL. 83 

menacingly demanded if we wanted to be served in the same 
manner; and, also, why we did not go to sea. To the first part 
of his demand I replied that he might do as he pleased; and, to 
the second, that we would not go before communicating with the 
captain-general. Finding his threats of no avail, he at length re- 
luctantly yielded to our request; and our letter demanding justice 
from the captain -general was ready by two p. m., at which time 
(having engaged a man to go, for the consideration of eleven dol- 
lars), we applied at the post-house for horses, and were informed 
that the king did not permit foreigners to send expresses. Enraged 
at this refusal, I went again to the governor, who appeared sur- 
prised at it, and immediately gave the man orders to go; and I gave 
him the letter in the governor's presence. 

**This business being finished, the governor observed that he was 
very sorry for what had happened, and would endeavor to purchase 
the clothes belonging to the oflScers of the Hazard who had been 
plundered. Before leaving him I requested, if he decided to seize 
the brig, that he would send only an ofiicer and two or three men, 
as we should make no resistance, and there were many valuable 
books and instruments on board which might possibly be useful to 
them." 

**0n Tuesday, April Gth, an answer was received from the cap- 
tain-general, who (after making known his unjust suspicions relative 
to the object of our voyage, and affirming that we had no right to 
navigate in these seas), wound up by assuring us that, after hearing 
the governor's report, we should have the most complete satisfaction. 
In consequence of this assurance I went, the next morning, to the 
governor to let him know that Mr. Shaler intended going on board 
his vessel, but to this he objected till he heard again from head- 
quarters. An answer was sent to his excellency's letter on the 
8th by regular post, refuting his various charges against us; and 
on the 13th Captain Shaler left the castle, by request of the governor. 

'' The morning following, as soon as we landed, we were informed 
by an officer that it was the governor's order that we should prepare 
for sea as soon as possible. Our expenses having been considerably 
increased by our unexpected detention, I applied to the governor 
for leave to sell a few more pieces of linen to repay them; but this 
he said he could not grant; and, at the same time, asked me why 



84 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

the captain did not come to see him, observing tliat, after having 
quarrelled, it was proper to be friends again ; that he was sensible 
that in taking the part of Eowan we had done no more than our 
duty, and that he was desirous that a reconciliation should take 
place. On being infori^ied of this, Shaler and Kouissillon imme- 
diately went to call upon him, and it appeared as if he could not 
sufficiently express his joy at being again friends. He gave us 
permission to dispose of six more pieces of platillas to pay our 
additional expenses; and, on Monday, 19th, being ready for sea, he 
told us we were at liberty to go w^hen we pleased, but he should take 
it as a particular favor if we would wait twenty-four hours after the 
sailing of a large ship, then on the point of departure for Lima^ and 
which, it seems, some malicious person had suggested that it was 
our intention to capture. To this we assented; but, before the 
expiration of the time, a new cause of trouble had arisen. 

" An Irish sailor, who had deserted from us, had declared that we 
had seventeen barrels on board which were very heavy, and which 
he supposed to be filled with dollars; and that we had made consid- 
erable sales at Rio Janeiro, and had received payment in gold, 
w^hich was then on board. On Thursday morning, 22d, the gov- 
ernor sent for Captain Shaler, requesting him to bring his papers; 
and finding, on examination, that there was no Spanish passport, 
asked the reason. Shaler replied that it was not requisite, and 
requested him, if he had any intention of making further trouble, 
to make known his complaints that we might take the necessary 
steps to remove the cause. He assured Captain S. that he did not 
intend troubling him any further, repeated the request that we 
would wait till the ship had sailed for Lima, and wrote our clear- 
ance on the back of our sea-letter, which, with the other papers, he 
returned to Captain Shaler. Friday morning Captain Parga, who 
commanded two privateers then in port, made a signal, and, at the 
same time, w^e observed them loading several cannon on the side 
that bore upon us; and soon after, as we were sitting down to 
breakfast, a lieutenant of the Britannia came on board, and desired 
Captain Shaler and his supercargo to go on board that vessel with 
their papers. A request of this singular nature from the captain of 
a private armed ship, v>^hile we were within the jurisdiction of the 
Governor of Valparaiso, and while two king's ships were lying 



FURTHER DIFFICULTIES. 85 

there, was treated with the contempt it merited. We returned for 
answer that when w^e had breakfasted we would go ashore and see 
the governor. But, seeing them immediately manning and arming 
their boats to board us, and being desirous of avoiding such another 
horrid scene as we had witnessed on board the Hazardy Captain 
Shaler very prudently went on board in our boat, and, shortly after, 
sent for me. Captain Parga then went with Shaler on board the 
brig; sent our sailors on board the privateer, where they were put in 
irons, and immediately began the search for the kegs of specie, 
which they found precisely in the place described by the deserter, 
when they desisted from further search ; and, on opening the kegs, 
discovered that they contained quicksilver, which Captain Parga 
acknowledged we had a perfect right to carry, and said he should 
report to the governor (by whose orders he had acted), and had no 
doubt our men would be at once restored, and permission given us 
to sail. In the evening Captain Shaler was sent for, and taken on 
board the Britannia, where he was questioned by Captain Parga 
(who showed him the order of the governor, by which he was act- 
ing) relative to the owners of the brig, the object of the voyage, etc. 
He requested that part of the papers might be left with him, and 
again observed that our men would be sent on board in the morning, 
and we should have permission to sail. Of this, however, we felt 
so much doubt that Captain Shaler went next morning to demand 
categorically whether they meant to stop us or not; and the answer 
was not only positive that they did mean to detain us, but was given 
with such vulgar and abusive language as might naturally be ex- 
pected from the captain of a Spanish privateer. Shortly after he 
sent his men on board, and took up on deck ten kegs of the quick- 
silver, in doing which they burst two, onS of which was wholly, and 
the other partly, lost. 

*' We immediately despatched another courier to Santiago, com- 
plaining to the captain-general of this new act of injustice, and 
asking permission to come to the capital to settle the business. A 
reply was received on the 28th, wherein his excellency observed 
that our business could be soon finished at Valparaiso by answering 
satisfactorily the following questions, viz. : 

*'Why was the quicksilver hidden? To whom does it belong? 
and. What port is it destined for? 



86 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

*'In reply to these questions Mr. Slialer deposed before the gov- 
ernor and a notary, first, that it was not hidden; second, that it 
belonged to the owners of the cargo ; and, third, that its destination 
was — as the vessel's had been reported to be — round the world; and 
to this deposition Shaler solemnly made oath on a volume of Shake- 
speare, presented for the purpose by the governor, a fitting climax to 
this solemn farce. 

*'0n Thursday, 29th, Captain Eowan was released from confine- 
ment, and requested by the governor to go on board and take charge 
of his ship again; but this he refused to do till he was indemnified 
for the losses he had sustained. He was, consequently, confined 
again in the castle, but his officers and men, who had likewise re- 
fused, were forced to go by soldiers sent by the governor. 

*'0n Saturday evening, May 1st, this illustrious representative of 
the Spanish crown, whose name is Don Antonio Francisco Garcia 
Carrasco, was relieved from further performance of duty by the 
arrival, from Santiago, of the true proprietary of the government, 
with his family, whose return had been hastened by the confusion 
and mischief which had been wrought in Valparaiso by the igno- 
rance and stupidity of the governor pro tern. 

**0n Monday we visited him, and were received with such dis- 
tinguished marks of good-will as made us regret his previous ab- 
sence, particularly as he assured us that had he been present we 
should have found no difficulty in obtaining permission to go to the 
capital. 

'*0n Tuesday orders came from the captain-general for the quick- 
silver to be restored to us, and that we should proceed to sea without 
delay ; and, as we did not think it prudent to risk further loss by 
entering into a process for damages, we wrote to his excellency that 
we should apply to our own government for indemnification for the 
detention and loss to which we had been subjected. The day fol- 
lowing we received an application for the i3urchase of the quick- 
silver from the commandant of the custom-house guards, who 
proposed to bring the money himself and take it away in a clan- 
destine manner, but as we supposed that the whole scheme was a 
snare laid to take us in, we would have nothing to do with it. 
Thursday morning we unmoored and hauled outside the shipping, 
and in the afternoon took on shore five pieces of linen, with the 



G-ALLIPAGOS ISLANDS AND SAN BLAS. 87 

produce of which we paid our various additional expenses ; and, at 
four P.M.J having taken leave of our acquaintances, came on board, 
and immediately put to sea, happy in being at last clear of a port 
where, for two and a half months, we had experienced nothing but 
crosses and disappointments. " 

The notoriety they had attained by these protracted 
quarrels with an ignorant, conceited, and pusillanimous 
official, rendered it injudicious to attempt to enter any 
other port of Chili or Peru, and they accordingly deter- 
mined to steer for the coast of Mexico, stopping on the 
way for recreation, rest, and refreshment at the Galli- 
pagos Islands, where they arrived and anchored on the 
30th of May, and spent a delightful week in the enjoy- 
ment of such freedom of action in the midst of the wild 
scenes of natural beauty as they could the better appre- 
ciate from the contrast to their recent experiences. Fish 
and turtle w^ere so abundant that they not only feasted 
upon them during their stay, but laid up good store for 
future use. They took long rambles on shore, and saw 
immense numbers of guanos of various sizes and colors, 
but were not tempted to try them as food, though they 
are said to be very delicate. They traversed various 
parts of Albemarle Island, and camped out one night 
in search of water, but found none. 

On the 8th of June they sailed for San Bias, and in a 
few days sighted the coast near Acapulco, and from that 
time kept the land in sight every day till thej^ arrived 
at San Bias, on the 11th of Ju]y. 

Here again they were destined to suffer from the 
petty jealousy of Spanish officials, of which they had 
quite as absurd an exhibition as at Valparaiso, though 



88 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

very different in its character. They found only two 
or three subordinates at San Bias, as all the chief digni- 
taries were at Tipec, a town some twenty leagues in the 
interior, to which they were accustomed to retreat dur- 
ing the summer from the proverbially unhealthy climate 
of San Bias. They were met with every demonstration 
of friendship, and a courier w^as at once despatched to 
Tipec with notice of their arrival and a request for a 
passport to Tipec for Eouissillon that he might explain 
their objects and wishes. Immediately on receipt of this 
notice the commissary came down to San Bias and con- 
firmed the cordial reception they had met from the sub- 
ordinates by acceding at once to their requests. He 
engaged to supply everything that was wanted ; and 
learning that they had on board some boxes of tin-plate, 
which was very much wanted, agreed to take them at a 
very great advance on the cost. 

Kouissillon accompanied him on his return to Tipec, 
and a few days after wTote them from there that the 
governor, whom he represented as a vain, passionate 
man, had taken offence at the commissary's having pre- 
sumed to make any arrangement with them before con- 
sulting him ; had refused to confirm the agreement, and 
decided that whatever supplies they purchased must be 
paid for by a draft on the American minister at Madrid. 
Here, then, were these two great men by the ears at 
once, and the community took part in the quarrel^ the 
native population adhering to the commissary, w^hile the 
old Spaniards upheld the governor. The former, whose 
appointment emanated from the same source as that of 
the latter, and whose line of duty was distinct and inde- 



SAIL FOR THE THREE MARIAS. 89 

pendent, was exceedingly piqued and mortified at the 
position in whicii lie was placed, and was determined 
not to submit to it. Tlie governor, who could not brook 
opposition to his will, was incapable of concealing his 
wrath. The quarrel becani3 the absorbing topic of the 
village of Tipec, and ne^/er before was there such a 
tempest in a teapot. 

A week passed, however, before the parties who had 
been the innocent cause of all this disturbance were 
subjected to any inconvenience in consequence of it, 
and meantime they had profited by the favor with which 
their application had first been received to secure such 
supplies as they required, and also to procure a new 
topmast to replace one they had lost in a squall. But 
the governor's rancor was so excited that he sent a per- 
emptory order, without even making any reference to 
the manner of payment for the supplies, that they should 
jmm.ediately leave the port, with a threat of being forced 
to do so by the gunboats in case of disobedience. 

Kouissillon meantime had been arranging for a jour- 
ney to Mexico, Vv^hich city he was very desirous of vis- 
iting, and where he was encouraged to believe he could 
get permission from the viceroy to dispose of the whole 
or part of the cargo. On receiving orders to depart, 
therefore, the}'' sent word to Rouissillon that they would 
go to the Three Marias Islands, lying about sixty miles 
west of San Bias, and there wait till they got word from 
him relative to the success of his mission, which he was 
to send them by boat from San Bias. 

They accordingly obeyed the governor's order with- 
out waiting for its enforcement, and next morning an- 



90 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

chored in a beautiful sandy bay, where they were shel- 
tered from the southeast winds, which prevail at this 
season and are often violent. Here again they enjoyed 
the pleasure of uncontrolled action, and improved the 
opportunity for overhauling the rigging, repairing and 
brushing up the vessel, and laying in good store of fuel. 
They also indulged in making excursions on shore for 
rest and recreation, and allowed the crew to do the 
same, one half at a time. 

But week after week rolled by till nearly three 
months had elapsed without news of Eouissillon, and at 
length they determined to take the risk of returning to 
San Bias to learn, if possible, what had been his fate. 
Approaching the port with caution, on the afternoon of 
the 14:tli of October, they lay by all night in sight of the 
town, and next morning saw a canoe approaching, pad- 
dled by Indians, who soon delivered to them the long- 
expected letter from Eouissillon, the contents of which 
were of a surprising and very encouraging nature. It 
was dated at Guadalaxara, where he had been treated 
with great kindness and hospitality by many of the 
most respectable inhabitants, and had received a very 
polite letter from the viceroy, with a passport for Mex- 
ico, and a permission to sell at San Bias a sufficient por- 
tion of the cargo to pay for the supplies they needed. 
He also hoped to obtain permission to sell the whole 
cargo, and to return to San Bias in a week or two. 

The viceroy, moreover, in consequence of the repre- 
sentations of Rouissillon and of many of the most re- 
spectable inhabitants of Tipec, had reprimanded the 
governor for his rude and uncivil treatment of them, 



ROUISSILLON DEPARTS FOR MEXICO. 91 

and the mortification he experienced at being thus out- 
generalled by the commissary, acting on a previously 
debilitated constitution, had brought on a fever, of 
which he died. 

They immediately sent a reply to the letter, and al- 
though they could now enter the port of San Bias with- 
out apprehension, yet, as they would have had to submit 
to the encumbrance of a guard stationed on board the 
vessel, they preferred returning to the islands. After 
passing another week there, they came again to San 
Bias, and were received with such civility as plainly in- 
dicated the change which had taken place at headquar- 
ters. 

The news from Eouissillon was not as encouraging as 
his first letter had led them to expect. A second letter, 
however, contained the gratifying intelligence that, by 
a judicious application of a small douceur^ he had ob- 
tained a permit to dispose of goods to the amount of 
$10,000. He returned to San Bias on the 10th of De- 
cember, having spent two weeks, on the way from Mex- 
ico, negotiating with purchasers. 

The goods were landed and sales began at once, but 
the demand was slow, and it was finally arranged that a 
portion should be left with Rouissillon to be taken by 
him to Mexico, from whence he would make his way to 
the United States, and account to them the following 
year on meeting them there. 

Their departure from San Bias was delayed by the''\ 
arrival from California of a quantity of sea-otter skins, 
which they succeeded in purchasing, and at length put^ 
to sea, leaving Kouissillon with goods to the amount of 



92 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

about $3000 prime cost, whicli it Avas supposed would 
bring at least three times that amount in Mexico. 

The mutual feelings of attachment wliich had grown 
up between them in the course of their varied experi- 
ences made the parting a painful one on both sides, and 
they looked forward with anticipations of pleasure to 
the time of their meeting in the United States, of which 
Eouissillon declared liis intention of becoming a citizen. 
But that anticipation was never realized. On tlieir ar- 
rival in the United States the following year they heard 
of his death in Mexico, not long after his arrival there, 
and the means of communication with that country 
were then so uncertain that they never were able to as- 
certain the particulars or to get any account of the prop- 
erty in his charge. 

Having received information of a quantity of sea- 
otter skins at San Diego, California, they next steered 
for that port, being very desirous to secure an article of 
merchandise which is always in demand in China. Their 
previous experience of the characteristics of Spanish of- 
ficials had prepared them to expect a display of fuss 
and feathers, with a substratum of avaricious duplicity 
and cowardice. But all previous exhibitions of these 
traits were surpassed by that of Don Manuel Kodriguez, 
the commandant of San Diego. 

They arrived at that port and anchored about a mile 
inside the battery which guarded the entrance on the 
^ 17th of March, 1803. The next morning the comman- 
dant made his appearance on the shore with an escort of 
twelve dragoons, and, hailing the brig, requested that a 
boat might be sent for him. This being done he crowd- 



AT SAN DIEGO. 93 

ed his whole retinue into the boat, and on reaching the 
brig waited till they had climbed over the side and ar- 
ranged themselves in two rows, with swords drawn and 
hats in hand, when he followed, and passed between 
them to the cabin. After the usual inquiries he desired 
the oflScer in command of the escort to make a memo- 
randum of the articles they required ; counted the men, 
and, finding only fifteen, expressed astonishment at their 
undertaking so long and dangerous a voyage with so 
few hands, and gave them permission to go on shore 
near where they lay, but forbade their visiting the town, 
which was about three miles distant. He then tool^ 
leave, with the same ceremony as on arrival, but left 
five of his escort on board to see, as he said, that no - 
contraband trade was carried on. 

In the afternoon they made an excursion on shore, 
and, having walked down to the battery without meet- 
ing any one to oppose their entrance, they availed them- 
selves of the opportunity to make a cursory examination 
of its strength, and found it to consist of eight brass 
9-pound guns, well-mounted and in good order, with 
a plentiful supply of ball. 

Keturning on board before sunset, they made ac- 
quaintance with the sergeant of the guard, who proved 
to be an intelligent yonng fellow, who told them that, 
only a few days previous, the ship Alexander^ of Bos- 
ton, had been there ; that her captain (Brown) had suc- 
ceeded in purchasing several hundred sea-otter skins 
from different individuals; that the commandant, with- 
out making any previous demand for their delivery, had 
then boarded the vessel with an armed force, and car- 



94 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

ried off all the skins they could find ; and these skins 
were still in the possession of the commandant. They 
made an unsuccessful effort to purchase them, but were 
offered quite a number of skins by other parties. 

Tlie subsequent proceedings are described at length 
in the published "Narrative." The following account 
of them is from the manuscript journal: 

*' On the 21st of March the commandant paid us another visit, and 
we then paid him for our supplies, and, as we intended going to sea 
in the morning, he, on parting, wished us a successful voyage. In 
the evening we sent the small boat ashore and purchased twenty- 
five skins of the soldiers, which we brought on board between eight 
and nine p.m. Having agreed for another lot, which were to be 
brought down to the shore abreast the vessel, we sent the long-boat 
for them, with the first officer and two men. They did not return; 
and next morning, seeing the boat hauled up and our men, appar- 
ently guarded by soldiers, 1 went ashore with four hands, armed 
with pistols, and brought them off, together with the long-boat. 
They told us they were taken by the commandant in person, who 
had, no doubt, sent the man who offered us the skins, and then lay 
in wait to seize the men, who had been bound and lying on the 
ground all night. Immediately on coming on board we disarmed 
the guard— a sergeant and four men — hoisted in our boats, and got 
under way, having a fair wind to go out, though light. Before we 
got within gun-shot of the fort they fired a shot ahead of us. We 
had previously loaded all our guns, and brought them all on the 
starboard side. As the tide was running in strong, we were not 
abreast the fort— which we passed within musket-shot— till half an 
hour after receiving their first shot, all which time they were play- 
ing away upon us; but as soon as we were abreast the fort we 
opened upon them, and in ten minutes silenced their battery and 
drove everybody out of it. They fired only two guns after we be- 
gan, and only six of their shot counted, one of which went through 
between wind and water; the others cut the rigging and sails. As 
soon as we were clear we landed the guard, who had been in great 
tribulation lest^ we should carry them off.'' 



ARRIVAL AT ST. QUINTINS. 95 

I have previously mentioned that they had inspected 
the battery, and found it to contain eight 9-pound guns. 
Their own armament was six 3-pounders, one of which 
was unserviceable. 

Mr. Richard H. Dana, in reviewing my father's book 
in the North American^ quotes at length his account of 
this affair, and adds : 

*' We take this opportunity to assure the author that, after the 
lapse of more than thirty years, the story was yet current in Sau 
Diego and the neighboring ports and missions." 

I remember, also, that, not long after the transfer of 
California to the United States, my father received a let- 
ter from Commodore Biddle, in the course of which he 
referred to the '' Battle of San Diego" as giving him a 
claim to the governorship of the newly acquired terri- 
tory, since it was won many years in advance of the 
achievements of Fremont and other heroes of the Mex- 
ican war. 

Proceeding southward, they next anchored in the 
Bay of St. Quintins, where they fonnd Captain Brown, 
of the ship Alexander^ who gave them such an account 
of the barbarous treatment he had met with at San Bias 
as served to confirm their conviction of the wisdom of 
their own policy. 

A few days after their arrival, and after the depart- 
ure of Captain Brown for the Northwest Coast, they re- 
ceived a visit from a jolly company of padres of different 
missions, accompanied by the commandant of San Vin- 
cente, a mission about sixty miles north of St. Quintins. 
The news of the affair at San Diego had preceded their 



96 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

arrival, but, far from exciting prejudice, it seemed only 
to make them indignant with the commandant, and 
their wish to make amends for his treacherous and cow- 
ardly behavior, and to express their grateful sense of 
the magnanimity of the Americans in their treatment 
of the guard was manifested not alone by words, but 
by efforts, in which they seemed to vie with each other 
in hospitable attentions and attempts to provide for ev- 
ery want. They encamped upon the shore, and were so 
urgent to prolong the enjoyment they seemed to derive 
from the companionship of intelligent men that they 
persuaded their visitors to remain another week after 
they were fully ready for sea. 

The next and last place they visited on the California 
coast was San Borgia, where they met with Padre Ma- 
riano Apolonario, a man whose purity, excellence, and 
benevolence of character were such as to lift him above 
all considerations of sect, and entitle him to rank with 
such Christians as Fenelon. My father's account of his 
visit here, as given in his journal, is as follows: 

** Padre Mariano had been some days expecting us, and, as he 
could not live on board ship on account of the motion, we pitched 
a tent for him on shore opposite the vessel. We had intended re- 
maining only two or three daj^s, on account of being short of water, 
but he removed the difficulty by having it brought on mules a dis- 
tance of six or seven miles; and when, at the end of a week, we 
were preparing to put to sea, the good man insisted upon our re- 
maining another week, offering to furnish provisions, water, and 
everything that the mission afforded; nor could we resist his solici- 
tations, being convinced by the great pains he took to make our stay 
agreeable that he was much pleased with our company. In addi- 
tion to various little presents of wine, dried fruits, etc., he gave us 
a stallion, and mare with foal, which we had previously tried in vain 



FIRST HORSES IN THE SANDWICH ISLANDS. 97 

to purchase, to take to the Sandwich Islands. These were an acqui- 
sition we had almost despaired of obtaining. We took them on 
board on the 20th, and, having presented him with various articles 
of which he stood in need, we took leave of the good padre, who 
promised to say a mass for our preservation and happiness ; and, if 
any man's prayers reach Heaven, I doubt not his do, for he was as 
devout as he was hospitable and liberal; and, indeed, such disin- 
terested friendship as we experienced from him I have rarely, if ever, 
met with." 

Touching at Cape St. Lucas, where they purchased 
"another pretty mare with foal"'— for which they paid 
in goods which cost in Europe one and a half dollars — 
they took their departure on the SOtli May, and arrived 
at Karakaroa Bay, Sandwich Islands, on the 21st of June. 

They found it was the season of a periodical taboo, 
during which no canoes were allowed to stir; but the 
next day John Young came on board, and told them 
that the king was at Mowee. 

Young was very desirous of having one of the horses, 
and, thinking that the probability of their increase would 
be better secured by leaving them in different places, 
they next day moved to Tooagah Bay, near Young's 
residence, and landed the mare, of which he took charge. 
This was the first horse ever seen in Owyhee, and nat- 
urally excited great astonishment among the natives. 

From here they went to Mowee, and were first 
boarded by Isaac Davis, who, with John Young, com- 
prised, at that time, the European population of the isl- 
ands. 

Soon after a large double canoe came off, from which 
a powerfully-built, athletic man, nearly naked, came on 
board, and was introduced by Davis as Tamaahmaah^ 
5 



98 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

the great king. His reception of them was not such as 
they had anticipated, nor could they account for his ap- 
parent coolness and lack of interest, except on the sup- 
position that it was mere affectation. He took only a 
careless look at the horses, and returned to the shore 
without expressing any curiosity about them. His sub- 
jects, however, were not restrained by any such desire 
to appear unconcerned. The news of the arrival of the 
w^onderf ul animals spread rapidly, the decks were crowd- 
ed with visitors, and next day, when they were landed, 
a great multitude had assembled, evidently with no def- 
inite conception of any use ihiJ- could be made of them. 
As might be expected from people who had never seen 
a larger animal than a pig, they were at first afraid to 
approach them, and their amazement reached its climax 
when one of the sailors mounted the back of one of 
them, and galloped up and down upon the beach. They 
were greatly alarmed, at first, for the safety of the rider, 
but when they saw how completely he controlled the 
animal, and how submissively and quietly the latter ex- 
erted his powers in obedience to his will, they seemed 
to have a dawning conception of the value of such a 
possession, and rent the air with shouts of admiration. 

The king, however, could not be betrayed into any 
expression of wonder or surprise, and, although he ex- 
pressed his thanks when told they were intended as a 
present to himself, he only remarked that he could not 
perceive that their ability to carry a man quickly from 
one place to another would be a sufficient compensation 
for the great amount of food they would necessarily re- 
quire. 



EETUKK TO BOSTON VIA CANTON. 99 

This want of appreciation of the value of the present, 
which they had taken so much pains to procure, was 
naturally a disappointment to the donors, who could 
only hope that time and experience would serve to con- 
vince the stolid chieftain that an important element in 
the w^ork of civilization was comprised in their possible 
services. 

From the Sandwich Islands they took their course for' 
China, and arrived at Wampoa on the 29th of August,^ 
1803, and on going up to Canton found letters froni 
home, by which my father received the first intelligence 
that his father had died at Salem on the 8tli October, 
1801 — nearly two years previous. 

At Canton, after disposing of the sea-otter skins at a ^^ 
handsome profit, they decided to separate. Mr. Shaler 
took charge of the Lelia Byrd^ and returned to the 
California coast with a cargo which they had had an op- 
portunity to purchase on ver}^ favorable terms, and my 
father took passage for Boston on the ship Alert^ Cap- 
tain Ebbets, with a valuable investment of silks as 
freight. They left Canton on the 4th of January, 1804, 
stopped a few days at the Cape of Good Hope, and on 
the 13th of May arrived at Boston, where (in the conclud- 
ing words of his journal), " for the first time in seven 
and a half long years I meet with friends." '^ 

During this period he had twice circumnavigated the 
globe ; had performed three of the most daring and 
venturesome voyages on record, and brought them to a 
successful issue, not less by his skill and knowledge of 
practical navigation than by the sagacity and judicious 
management of the property of which he had charge. 



100 VOYAGES OF A MERCHAKT NAVIGATOR. 

belonging to himself and others. He had started out 
for himself from Havre, at the age of twenty-three, with 
a capital of $2000, and now at thirty returned from his 
wanderings with a fortune of $70,000, thirty-five times 
the original capital in seven years, and all wrought out 
in legitimate lines of commercial enterprise by genuine 
hard work of both head and hands. 

Let it not be forgotten that within the easy memory 
of many yet living the number whose fortunes exceeded 
$50,000 was sufficiently rare to entitle them to rank as 
men of wealth, and the possessor of $100,000 was re- 
garded as having attained a much higher position on 
Fortune's wheel than that we now give to the owner 
of a million. 



CHAPTER VI. 

1804-1807. 

Marriage and Settlement at Lancaster, Massachusetts. — Forced to 
Kesume Navigation. — Voyage of the Aspasia, and its Euinous 
Termination. 

Believing himself to be now possessed of ample 
means for the support of a family without further ne- 
cessity of effort to increase his fortune, he was mar- 
ried, on the 12th of October, 1804, to his cousin, Dorcas 
Cleveland Hiller, second child of Joseph and Margaret 
(Cleveland) Hiller. Her father was a highly respected 
citizen of Salem, and was the first collector of the ports 
of Salem and Beverly, appointed by President Washing- 
ton. Her mother w^as the sister of my father's father. 

In company with his brother William, he soon after 
purchased a very pleasant estate in Lancaster, Massa- 
chusetts, and devoted himself to the rational enjoyment 
of such tastes as he now felt himself at liberty to in- 
dulge. These were simple and unostentatious. He had 
always a great love of reading, and he had, in the course 
of his travels, secured such a collection of books as to 
constitute a library which, for that day, was no less re- 
markable for the number of volumes it contained than 
for the good taste indicated in their selection. 

It would be natural to suppose that one who since 
coming upon the stage of active life had been so con- 



102 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

stantly engaged in such exciting scenes of adventure 
would soon tire of the monotony and tameness of such 
a life as that of a ISTew England country-town at that 
period. 

The history of his life at Lancaster, however, proved 
that his enjoyment of life was in nowise dependent upon 
such stimulants, and that the resources afforded by his 
own tastes and acquirements, the interests of domestic 
and social life, and the opportunities for usefulness in 
the promotion of objects of benevolence and improve- 
ment which constantly presented themselves, and in 
which he had the full syrnpathy and aid of my mother, 
were all-sufficient for his happiness, and he regarded it 
as the greatest misfortune when he was compelled again 
to go to sea. 

" Had Mr. Shaler been as fortunate in the management 
of the joint property of which he had taken charge as 
he and my father had been while acting together, the 
necessity might not have arisen for attempting a resto- 
ration of their fortunes. But not only was his second 
voyage in the Lelia Byrd a very unfortunate one in it- 
self, but was almost entirely unsuccessful in one of its 
important objects ; the collection of debts due from va- 
rious missions who had bought goods of them on credit. 
Out of twenty priests who had been thus accommodated, 
only four proved by their actions that honesty was any 
part of their religion. 

The death of Eouissillon, in Mexico, extinguished all 
hope of returns from the property in his care, and these 
combined with other losses so reduced the amount of 
their possessions as to incite them to new efforts for 



PURCHASE OF THE "ASPASIA." 103 

their retrieval. Fortunately there was no loss whatever 
of the confidence they felt in each other, and no hesita- 
tion in again uniting in the accomplishment of new en- 
terprises. 

The war succeeding the short peace of Amiens had 
again closed the ports of the Spanish colonies to their 
own ships, and they could only receive their supplies of 
European manufactures under cover of a foreign flag. 

Another voyage to Chili and Peru, therefore, seemed 
to offer a prospect of profit proportional to the risk, and 
by combining their resources they fitted out an expedi- 
tion for those countries, of which my father was to take 
charge. 

In June, 1806, they bought in ISTew York a Baltimore 
clipper schooner called the Aspasia, of one hundred and 
seventy tons, and loaded her with such a cargo as expe- 
rience had taught them was suited to the wants of the 
people to whom it was to be offered. Yessel and cargo 
were owned equally by Mr. Shaler and my father, and 
absorbed nearly the whole fortune of each, only a por- 
tion of which was covered by insurance at a liigh pre- 
mium. 

I have no journal of this voyage, and rely for my ac- 
count of it on his published narrative, and still more on 
his letters to my mother, from which I shall make liberal 
quotations. 

The earliest allusion to the subject which I find un- 
der his own hand is in a letter to my mother at Lancas- 
ter, dated Boston, 17th of June, 1806, in which he says: 

*'I found letters here from Shaler announcing the purchase of a 
vessel, and urging me to come on to Kew York as speedily as possi- 



104 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

ble. I have, therefore, finished all my arrangements here, embarked 
my baggage on a vessel for New York which sails to-day, and intend 
setting off myself on Thursday morning." 

The experiences of his journey to Kew York, as inci- 
dentally mentioned in one or two subsequent letters, 
will serve to give to modern reac^ers a realizing sense 
of what they have gained (and, possibly, a conceptiou of 
some things they have lost) by the introduction of steam- 
boats and railroads. He writes from Providence on the 
20th of June : 

''While waiting for the packet for New York I am tempted to 
scribble a line to you. We shall leave here in about two hours, and 
I hope to be in New York by Monday or Tuesday. I fell in here 
with James and T. H. Perkins, the former of whom I had never met 
before. He inquired particularly for you, expressed much regret 
at not having seen you in Boston, and they both promised to visit 
you at Lancaster." 

Next day he writes from New Haven : 

'•' You will wonder how I came to be here, as I yesterday informed 
you I was waiting for the packet in Providence. At that time my 
passage was engaged in the packet; but while I was waiting for the 
porter to take my trunk on board, the mail stage called to know if 
there were any passengers, and I could not resist the impulse of tak- 
ing the first opportunity that offered, so stepped in, and here I am. 
This is fortunate, for the wind is blowing strong from the west, and 
the packet, therefore, must remain at Newport till it shifts. By rid- 
ing another night I could have reached New York to-morrow morn- 
ing, but I was fatigued and preferred spending a day or two here. 
On Monday I shall take the stage again, and be in New York the 
next morning. 

''. . . While writing I learn that the wind has changed, and that 
an excellent packet sails this evening for New York, so farewell 
stage. I have little doubt of arriving there to-morrow. 

''Would to- Heaven that something might occur that should make 



PREPAKATIONS FOR THE VOYAGE. 105 

it proper and prudent to give up the voyage; but it would be as wise 
to wish for fortune at once." 

From New York he writes on the 25th of June : 

**I found Mr. Slialer had purchased an excellent vessel for our 
business, the schooner Aspasia, of one hundred and seventy tons' 
burden. From her size and construction she will be a very uncom- 
fortable and swift-sailing vessel ; but, provided the voyage turns out 
as well as we have reason to expect, and enables me thenceforth to 
remain with you, no inconvenience or fatigue will be regarded. I 
think I shall be ready for sea in about three weeks." 

In a later letter, on the 8th of July, he says, in reply 
to her expressed apprehensions that his vessel was an un- 
safe one : 

* * Though not comfortable, I consider her as safe a vessel as any 
whatever. She has the reputation of being an excellent sea-boat, 
and as we shall only be in ballast trim, she cannot be very un- 
comfortable. 

^*I am apprehensive of no rivals except from Boston; and if there 
are none fitted out this autumn I feel confident of being able to 
complete my voyage satisfactorily, so as to be with you again by 
August or September, 1807; and I assure you that so far from 
extending it, in order to make it better, I shall be ready to make 
any reasonable sacrifice in order to return within that period. As, 
however, it is a speculative kind of voyage, and one where you 
cannot expect to hear from me, let me beg you to indulge no un- 
necessary anxiety, as a thousand unforeseen events may occur to 
thwart my plans and keep me absent from all I hold most dear. 

** 1 intend writing to Prince to make insurance on the full amount 
I shall have in this voyage, if it can be done at twenty-five per cent, 
against all risks, as I feel that, in case of its failure, it will be diffi- 
cult to bring my mind to undertake another; and am more con- 
vinced than ever that it is acting more the part of wisdom to retire 
with means for a moderate and decent support with those without 
whom life is not worth having, rather than be absent drudging after 
affluence and luxury, even if that absence should secure it, of which 
there are always doubts. 
5^ 



106 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

''With even a very limited share of fortune, therefore, you may 
safely calculate on this being our last separation." 

In a subsequent letter he gives her the following 
sketch of his proposed voyage : 

*'The Aspasia and cargo will cost $40,000, of which I hold an 
interest of $17,500, Mr. Shaler an equal amount, and a friend of 
ours in Philadelphia the remaining $5000. My intention now is to 
proceed directly to the Falkland Islands, unless I should find myself 
short of fruit and vegetables, in which case I shall stop at the Cape 
de Verde Islands. 

*' At the Falkland Islands we shall probably spend a week in 
filling up our w^ater, getting a supply of live-stock, and putting our 
vessel in a fit state to encounter the rough weather that must always 
be expected in doubling Cape Horn. The first place I shall stop at 
after doubling the cape will be the Island of Chiloe, where it is 
probable I may dispose of part of my cargo ; and from thence pro- 
ceed northerly along the coast, touching at Aranco, Coquimbo, 
Pisco, Payta, and a hundred other little ports, till I have completed 
the sale of my cargo ; and with only a tolerable share of success I 
can hardly fail of doing it, and, consequently, of being with you 
again in twelve months. Another object I have in view, which 
may lengthen the voyage, is the purchase of copper. 

'' This article has been very abundant and cheap on the coast, and 
if it continues to be so, I shall probably secure a large quantity of 
it; and as my vessel will not carry above one hundred tons of such 
an article, it is not unlikely I may take several loads and deposit 
them on some desert island in the neighborhood, and then proceed to 
China and charter a ship to send after it. This would lengthen the 
voyage to eighteen months, but the advantage derived from it will 
be such that I am sure you will approve of it. Such are the out- 
lines of my plans, which must be varied according to circumstances 
and the information I receive. I trust I need not assure you that 
my voyage will not be extended unless something so brilliant should 
present itself that it would be weakness to let it pass. Mr. Prince 
informs me that he can make insurance against all risks for twenty- 
five per cent., and I have desired him to do it on my account for 



DISASTER AT SEA. 10^ 

$15,000, provided it extends to every risk that can be thought of. 
Shaler makes no insurance, as he thinks it worth as much to insure 
getting it in case of loss as to make the first insurance; but I feel 
that, on your account, it would be wrong in me to omit this pre- 
caution." 

'• Eio Janeiro, November 10, 1806. 

*'When I wrote you last, as the pilot was leaving me in New 
York, I little expected my next would be from this place, and still 
less that dire necessity would be the cause ; but so it is. Be not 
alarmed, however; our misfortunes are indeed trifling to what they 
might have been, and I consider the greatest to be that it will add 
to the contemplated time of our separation. 

''Nothing of consequence occurred during the first month of our 
voyage. We had an uncommonly calm time, and, therefore, made 
but indifferent progress till the 10th September, when we took the 
trade wind, and from its violence next day almost wished for the 
calms we had previously been lamenting as a calamity. 

*' We were at this time in latitude 20"^ north, longitude 37° west, 
and were under double-reefed sails, with a considerable sea running, 
when, at two a.m., I was roused by the dismal cry of * All hands, 
clear the wreck.' This was discordant music to me, who had all at 
risk, and, in case of its loss, should be doomed to almost perpetual 
banishment from those he holds most dear. On going on deck I 
found the foremast gone by the board, and hanging by the stay, 
which was fast at the mainmast head ; the mainmast, tottering with 
this additional weight, at each roll appeared as if it must go also. 
But one sailor, more active than the others, went up, at the risk of 
his life, and cut away this stay, when the mast immediately fell 
alongside, taking with it the bowsprit, which broke just without the 
stem. At this time the main boom got loose, and in the endeavor 
to secure it one man was dangerously wounded. 

** As it was dangerous having the spars alongside the vessel while 
we had so much sea, we got them to windward of her as soon as 
possible, but kept fast to them, in order to get them on board the 
following day. This we effected, notwithstanding a very high sea, 
and the consequent laboring of the vessel, which was increased pro- 
digiously from the weight being so much lessened above the centre 
of gravity. The rolling was such that for some time we were in 



108 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

expectation of seeing our mainmast go also. In the frequent ne- 
cessity this disaster made for sending men to the masthead, one of 
them, when nearly up to the crosstrees, lost his hold and fell; but, 
the mainsail being only partly hoisted, made a bag, and he fell di- 
rectly into it, otherwise he would have been dashed to pieces. 

''After clearing the wreck we rigged a jury-mast, and began to 
make considerable way. Being again under sail, the next thing to 
be considered was the best plan to pursue; and after weighing the 
advantages and disadvantages, the prospects of success, and the 
probable expense of repairing, of each one that presented itself to 
my mind, I came to the determination to endeavor to get to Rio 
Janeiro, where, if we were not permitted to sell our cargo, we could 
easily repair our damages and proceed on the original plan. But it 
was by no means a trifling undertaking to attempt to get here in our 
crippled condition, and its success was very doubtful, since (pre- 
suming upon our good sailing) I had not gone nearly so far to the 
eastward as vessels are accustomed to do that cross the equator, and 
feared, therefore, that it would be impossible for us to double Cape 
St. Roque. Failing in this, 1 intended to go to Para (a Portuguese 
settlement nearly on the equator), and there endeavor to sell our 
cargo; and, if not permitted, to proceed to Trinidad, and there get 
information of the part of the Spanish coast where we should be 
most likely to succeed in not making a lodng wyage (for this is the 
object we now had in view), and complete the unfortunate business 
by returning to America as expeditiously as possible. 

**My mind being made up on this business, and having given di- 
rections in accordance with my decision, I had now leisure to reflect 
upon my situation, and, contrasting it with what it was but twenty- 
four hours before, I was more forcibly impressed than I have ever 
been with the uncertainty of everything connected with navigation. 

** Could I now have transported myself to our home, even with 
the humiliating condition of living on a miserable $500 a year, most 
readily would I— But, stop a little, Mr. C. 

**To live on such an annuity is entirely out of the question, and I 
still hold that it is better to perish in the honest endeavor to secure a 
decent independence, and be enabled to help one's friends, than to veg- 
etate on such a pittance, and wear away life in discontented idleness. 

** Without meeting with any other serious calamity we crossed 



LETTERS FEOM RIO JANEIRO. 109 

the equator on the 6th of October, and arrived here on the 24th of 
the same month. Here I found, as I expected, a very cordial wel- 
come from all those who expected to be benefited by my misfortunes. 

**This was evident, even on the part of the government linguist, 
who tried to make me believe I could only employ such mechanics as 
he named — with a view, no doubt, to charging double and dividing 
the plunder— whereat, my wrath being kindled, I made application 
to higher authorit}'', and found I might employ whom I pleased. 

*'I then found I could have my work done for less than half what 
I was first told it would cost, yet it will require nearly or quite $2000 
to pay for repairs. 

** Both necessity and choice compel me to rig the Aspasia as a brig, 
as masts are not to be procured here for a schooner; and, if they 
were, I would not take them, as nothing can be so unwieldy, unsafe, 
and uncomfortable as so large a vessel rigged as a schooner. 

** The officers who examined my vessel have allowed me forty -five 
days for repairs, which will doubtless be more than is necessary. 

*'I wish my adventures had been of a more pleasing nature, but 
they might have been much more serious ; and to have crossed such 
an immense space of ocean in safety, in the wretched predicament 
we were in, is sufficient cause for grateful emotion." 

*'Eio Janeiro, November 15, 1806. 
'*Do not be apprehensive that I allow the accident I have met 
with to weigh upon my mind. It will probably lead to my making 
an arrangement here which will prolong my absence, and this I con- 
sider the greatest misfortune, for I find more and more that this sep- 
aration is a kind of suspension of existence, and, so far from acting 
on my old principle of succeed or perish, I feel that to return to 
you, even with a total loss of property, is very desirable, and will 
afliord great room for rejoicing; how much more, then, with suffi- 
cient to enable me to say * We meet to part no more.' It is this 
hope which gives me courage to prosecute my plans, and while en- 
livened by it and in possession of such health as I constantly enjoy, 
I assure you I feel as much like subverting a government or throw- 
ing the Andes into the sea as ever I did in my life. I had been flat- 
tering myself on the passage here that I might possibly manage to 
finish the voyage here, and return immediately to America; and this, 



110 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

probably, I should have been able to do, were not all commerce sus- 
pended between this and the Eiver Plate in consequence of the Eng- 
lish being there; and this has caused such a stagnation here as has 
not been known during the war. The English took Buenos Ayres, 
a city of twenty-five or thirty thousand inhabitants, with a force of 
only fifteen hundred men. The English general (Beresford) suffered 
himself to be lulled into the belief of security by the assurances of 
the bishop that the Spaniards were friendly to them, while, with the 
treachery of a Spaniard and the cunning of a priest, he was secretly 
plotting their destruction. When all was ready the English were 
suddenly attacked by an immense rabble, and were forced to capit- 
ulate. It is reported, however, that the Spaniards broke the capit- 
ulation, and were guilty of cruelties that would disgrace the savages 
of North America. 

*'I expect to be ready to leave in about three weeks, but whether 
in the Aspasia, on the original plan, is very doubtful, as I contem- 
plate making an arrangement for a Portuguese ship, which has a 
royal license for Lima. If I succeed I shall either dispose of the 
Aspasia or send her to Havre with a load of jerked beef. Such a 
plan must necessarily lengthen my absence, as to load a ship of 
three hundred and sixty tons at Lima, and return here, will take till 
next June or July, so that it will be late in the autumn before I shall 
be in Lisbon. While affairs in Europe are so uncertain it will be 
only consistent with common prudence to touch here on my way 
back, otherwise I should proceed directly from Lima to Lisbon, 
which would save much time and expense. Could I be certain of 
adopting this plan, and as certain of arriving safely in Lisbon, I 
should certainly propose your meeting me there, and spending the 
following winter with me in Italy, but it is too uncertain for you to 
run the risk and bear the fatigue of such a voyage with a possibility 
of disappointment. If I conclude this arrangement I shall go much 
more at my ease than in the Aspasia, besides running less risk of 
seizure; but what most influences me is the greater chance of profit; 
for, having a large ship, I expect to make more on the return than 
on the outward cargo. 

*'22d. — Had the bearer of this sailed a week ago, as he expected, 
you would doubtless, on reception of my letter, have made up your 
mind to an additional year's separation, as I had then serious thoughts 



LETTERS FROM RIO JANEIRO. HI 

of going to Lima and Lisbon ; but I have now the pleasure of inform- 
ing you that I yesterday made an arrangement which, barring acci- 
dents, will enable me to be with you in May or June next. I need 
not assure you how extremely pleasing this is to me, especially as the 
prospect is as good as anything I could calculate on in my original 
plan. 

* * I have sold the cargo of the Aspasia at its cost, and am to receive 
the amount of it in jerked beef at about $3 per cwt., to be delivered 
at the Island of St. Catherine's. It will amount to nine or ten thou- 
sand quintals ; and, as the Aspasia will hardly carry two thousand, 
I have contracted for the Portuguese ship before mentioned, and we 
shall be ready to leave for St. Catherine's in fifteen or twenty days. 
1 think we shall not be detained more than a month in loading, so 
that we may expect to sail for Havana by the 20th of January, 1807. 

*' My first mate, Mr. Rodgers, will take charge of the Aspasia, and 
I will go in the ship, the captain and officers of which are to be un- 
der my orders. 

*^To proceed directly to Havana from a Spanish port would, 
doubtless, be the height of imprudence, but from a port of a nation 
at peace with Great Britain I conceive to be as safe as from the 
United States, especially at this time, when there can be no suspi- 
cion of my being from the River Plate. 

"If the suspension of all commerce with that river operates 
against me in the sale of my outward cargo, it must act correspond- 
ingly in my favor in the sale of the beef at Havana, as the sup- 
ply which they have been in the habit of receiving is now entirely 
cut off. # 

**My fortune once hung entirely on coffee, and it turned out a 
ragged one. It now hangs entirely on beef, and we shall soon know 
its fate. In any event, I shall have the satisfaction of knowing that 
each day brings me nearer to you, at the same time that I am pur- 
suing a plan that promises more profit, with less risk, than cruising 
on the coasts of Chili and Peru." 

**Rio Janeiro, December 4, 1806. 
** It is but few days since I sent you, by the Criterion, Captain 
Chase, a long detail of our adventures, and of my future intentions. 
I still consider my plan far more eligible than the original one. I 



112 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

liave been enabled to despatch the Aspasia much sooner than I ex- 
pected, by giving something more for the beef, which I considered 
more advantageous than keeping her here two months. I wish it 
were in my power to get away as soon, for I consider every day's ab- 
sence from home as so much time completely lost; but two months 
will soon be gone, and then each day I shall be making advances 
towards that delightful retreat from whence nothing but cold pov- 
erty or the prospect of it shall again separate me. But who, alas! 
has more reason to dread this? With what a series of misfortunes 
have I not been assailed for the past three years, and with what con- 
fidence can I now expect to escape the pirates in the West Indies? 
I expect to meet with British ships of war, but do not fear them, 
as my business is regular, and such as will bear the nicest scrutiny 
by those who act uprightly; but should I meet with any of those 
privateers the consequences may be serious, as they respect the 
property of no one. I will not, however, dwell on the dark side of 
the picture, and the pleasing thought of meeting you in June will 
enable me to bear even a greater misfortune, though this would be 
complete ruin, and make it necessary for me to plough the ocean yet 
for many years. 

**I fear you may find the winter dull in the country, though the 
resources you have in your piano, books, etc., are so much greater 
than are usual, yet a little of the noise of the town at this dreary 
season is by no means unpleasant.'* 

A aliort letter from Rio Janeiro, written three weeks 
later, contains tjbe following : 

*' I shall leave here to-morrow for St. Catherine's, and with pros- 
pects extremely flattering, as we know that no beef has been shipped 
from the River Plate these four months past, and, except what is 
now laden on board American ships, there will probably be no more 
at all, as the English are going with suflScient force to take it, and 
it is not likely they will permit Americans to have any share in the 
commerce. Notwithstanding everything concurs to lead me to sup- 
pose that I shall terminate my voyage advantageously, yet so per- 
verse is my fortune of late that I count on nothing with confidence. 
A few months, however, will determine whether I am to enjoy the 



ST. CATHERINE'S. 113 

happiness of a home with you or continue to be an exile for 
years." 

It may be mentioned here, for the benefit of those 
readers who are not familiar with the Havana trade, 
that jerked beef from South America constituted one 
of the chief articles of import for the consumption, 
mostly, of the slave population. 

Owing to its perishable nature, it was never allowed 
to be landed in bulk, but was sold by the quintal from 
the ship in which it arrived. This method, of course, 
involved a long detention of the vessel in Havana. 

*'St. Catherine's, February 6, 1807. 

**I expected before this to have been on my way to Havana, but 
have been disappointed in the reception of our cargo. One half of 
it, however, is now here, and the remainder will be very soon, so 
that, making every allowance, I do not think we shall be detained 
later than the 1st of March, and I may yet be with you before the 
end of June. 

**This town contains about four thousand inhabitants, mostly 
Creoles, and there are about one thousand regular troops here. The 
government is military and perfectly despotic i bat only think of . 
investing an illiterate man, who has risen from the ranks, with such 
power! Such is the present governor. He, however, keeps most 
excellent order. One of our sailors happened to meet him in the 
street, and, not knowing him, neglected to take off his hat, for which 
offence he was immediately arrested and put in the stocks for an 
hour. . . . 

** There are some beautiful walks in the environs of the town, 
where I sometimes ramble alone for hours, thinking of home and of 
those who are dear to me, till I become so impatient that I could al- 
most sacrifice everything if I could be there by so doing. I often 
wish you could partake of the fine melons, peaches, pineapples, etc. , 
which v>^e are daily consuming. 

"But four or five months will soon wear off, and then— -I was go- 
ing to say— I shall be at home; but I foresee difficulties and dangers 



114 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

now to which I have hitherto been unaccustomed. A privateer may- 
take me, or I may be shipwrecked, and then 'farewell to all my 
greatness.' Yet I cannot help thinking that all will turn out right, 
especially when I reflect how often I have been conducted right 
even in spite of myself. You know how much my heart was set 
upon a voyage to the River Plate with you for my companion, and 
how reluctant I was to abandon it; yet, had I undertaken that voy- 
age in the large ship, as I contemplated, ruin would have been the 
inevitable consequence, as all the ships that sailed about that time 
from America have been so long embargoed by the English being 
there that those which had received their cargoes of beef have had 
it all spoiled; and those which had not sold their outward cargo 
have been lying there at great expense, and will finally be obliged 
to carry them away again." 

Of bis experiences subsequent to tbis letter I quote 
tbe account from bis publisbed "Narrative," witb tbe 
addition of an occasional introduction of a letter written 
at tbe time. 

*' Having decided on the plan I was now prosecuting, I had writ- 
ten by two opportunities from Rio Janeiro to my friends in Boston, 
requesting to have insurance effected if possible. But these were 
precarious times for neutrals, when the two great belligerents agreed 
in nothing else than plundering them, and I was aware of the un- 
certainty whether insurance could be effected at any rate. 

**0n the presumption, however, that such neutral commerce as 
did not, even in a remote degree, prejudice the interests of the bel- 
ligerents would be unmolested, I felt that I had little else than the 
sea-risk to guard against, and was therefore free from anxiety on the 
subject of insurance. 

* * Having accomplished our lading, after waiting for the last part 
of our cargo till my patience was nearly exhausted, we finally 
weighed anchor and sailed for Havana in the Telemaco on the 15th 
of February, 1807. 

*' A few degrees south of the equator we fell in with a British 
frigate, by which we were subjected to a rigid scrutiny, the result of 
which was a conviction of the neutrality of the property, the legal- 



MEETS WITH LORD COCHRANE^S FLEET. 115 

ity of the voyage, and, consequently, that no motive existed for de- 
tention. By the captain and officers of this ship I was treated with 
great civility, and on parting they wished me a pleasant voyage to 
Havana. A similar investigation, with a like result, by a British 
sloop-of-war, from which we were boarded a few days afterwards, 
encouraged the belief that I had nothing to apprehend from British 
vessels of war. / 

*'With these impressions I perceived no other obstacle to my 
reaching Havana than the sea-risk, and, with the certainty of reap- 
ing an immense profit on my adventure, my imagination often dwelt 
on the joy of a happy return to my family with a fortune which 
would supersede the necessity of leaving it again. But these pleas- 
ing anticipations were soon destined to pass into the regions of airy 
castles. 

''Early on a fine morning, when about a hundred and fifty miles 
to windward of the island of Martinique, we descried a number of 
vessels to westward, which proved to be a fleet of English vessels of 
w^ar. Being nearest the JRamilUes, of sevent^^-four guns, we were 
boarded from that ship, and on learning that the fleet was com- 
manded by Admiral Cochrane my heart sank within me. 

*' All my confidence resulting from the ordeal to which we had 
recently been subjected, combined with my entire conviction of the 
innocence and legality of the voyage, were insufficient to banish the 
apprehension that we should be sent in for adjudication. 

*'The boarding-officer from the Ramillies was a young man of 
good appearance, but totally deficient in every attribute of the gen- 
tleman except the garb. His behavior to the captain of the Telemaco 
and to myself while on board our own ship was marked by all that 
insolence, arrogance, and impudence which are the acknowledged 
peculiarities of a coward when conscious of being free from dan- 
ger. As the captain of the Telemaco did not speak English, I ac- 
companied this brutal officer on board the Ramillies with the ship's 
papers. My reception by the venerable and respectable commander 
of the ship formed a perfect contrast with that of the boarding-offi- 
cer. He was evidently one of the old school, urbane and gentle- 
manly, with manners and deportment as much at variance with those 
of his subalterns as were the courtiers of the time of the Louis's 
with the sans culottes of our day. After a thorough examination 



116 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

of our papers, in wliicli be was assisted by two of his oflScers, no 
cause was found for our detention, and tlie papers were consequently 
returned to me by the commander, who wished me a good voyage 
and sent me again on board my vessel. . . . We had scarcely filled 
away our sails, however, when the admiral having approached us, 
and the information having been conveyed to him by signal whence 
we came and whither bound, without deigning to see us or our pa- 
pers, he ordered our ship to be taken possession of and conducted to 
Tortola. Accordingly a boat from the Cerherus brought the requi- 
site number of men to take possession, and took our ship's company, 
including myself, on board that frigate." 

This information he conveys to my mother in the 
following letter : 

* * Tortola, April 24, 1807. 

**It is with grief, my dear wife, that I am under the necessit}'- of 
informing you of my having been sent into tMs place for adjudica- 
tion. I emphasize on * this place ' because I believe, of all the de- 
testable nests of pirates that ever the world was cursed with, this is 
the worst. 

'* We arrived yesterday, and I shall know in a day or two whether 
we shall be dismissed, or whether the affair is to be decided by a 
court of vice-admiralty. In the former case I shall be off immedi- 
ately; in the latter, I am told, it will take twenty or twenty -five 
days to determine, at which period, from the perishable nature of 
the cargo, I have my doubts whether, in case it is cleared, I had 
better receive or abandon it. In case of condemnation I shall ap- 
peal, and have no doubt of the decree being reversed. I know not 
whether any insurance has been effected for me; but, admitting it 
has been, I know the difficulty of recovering from those gentlemen. 

** At any rate, I foresee many years of toil and trouble, and, what 
is infinitely worse, separation from you and all I hold dear in life, 
compared with which any other misfortune is light. 

'' 25th. — I find the rascals intend to proceed against me. I shall en- 
deavor to compromise if possible; if not, as my cargo is composed 
of a perishable article, they will proceed to business immediately, 
and the affair will soon be determined.'' 



LETTERS FROM TORTOLA. 117 

''ToRTOLA, May 1, 1807. 

''While waiting the motions of the indolent and unfeeling law- 
yers and agents, who, from being inured to scenes of distress, and 
not unfrequently seeing our unfortunate countrymen dying in de- 
spair, are perfectly callous to every feeling of humanity, and conse- 
quently deaf to my entreaties for completing the business and short- 
ening my period of torture as much as possible, I sit down to beguile 
a moment and suspend unpleasant reflection by writing to you. . . . 
Though I may be condemned in this detestable sink of iniquity, the 
decree will certainly be reversed in England, where, for the honor 
of the nation, they must discountenance such wicked and unparal- 
leled decisions as are frequently made here. Indeed, Tortola is so 
notorious that, although, in coming here after being taken, we passed 
by Antigua, where there is a superior court and a judge of respecta- 
bility, Admiral Cochrane chose to send us here, well knowing that 
he could rely upon the decision being in his favor. 

'* But while I reflect upon all the suffering which may ensue from 
this misfortune ; that it must involve a protracted and uncertain sep- 
aration from you; that, if no insurance has been effected, I am utter- 
ly ruined; that, having undertaken this part of the voyage without 
the concurrence of Shaler he will be an innocent sufferer from my 
misfortune, and that my drafts from Eio Janeiro will be falling due 
in America just when the news of this seizure reaches there, my 
sympathies for an unfortunate English captain who lately left here 
exceed even the anguish caused by my own experience, and I am 
tempted to tell you the story that you may see to what lengths Ad- 
miral Cochrane will go to acquire only a paltry sum, and may judge 
by this what enormities such a monster would be guilty of were a 
greater temptation offered. 

** When Jerome Bonaparte made a sweep in the West Indies last 
summer he took a ship at Montserrat which belonged to this cap- 
tain, and which was his all. The ship was taken to St. Martin's, 
where the captain, expecting to get her very cheap, went and bought 
her, and, to raise funds for payment, drew bills on Tortola, where 
he expected to have a freight for his ship to Europe and to pay his 
drafts by his freight-money; but the poor fellow, on his way from 
St. Martin's to Tortola, fell in with the brave Cochrane, who seized 
his ship and sent her in here, where, to the astonishment even of the 



118 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

rogues of this island, she was condemned. The poor, unfortunate 
captain, who has a family in England, not being able to pay his 
debts, was thrown into prison, where he lay for several months, and 
the ship, with another owner, sailed a few days since for Europe. 
Could any misfortune be more aggravating and distressing than this, 
to be distressed and driven to despair by a servant of the govern- 
ment he contributed to support, and from whom he ought to have 
had protection. I think I never heard of any injustice to be com- 
pared with it; but, indeed, the character of the British naval officer 
is astonishingly degenerated. In any former war they would have 
despised the system of plunder and piracy they are now pursuing. 
For the several days I had the misfortune to be on board their ships 
the conversation of the officers consisted entirely of what they hoped 
to share from different prizes, so that I felt more as if I were with a 
band of robbers than with the officers of a great government, bent 
upon maintaining its dignity." 

'' St. Thomas, May 8, 1807. 
*' It seems as if all of those with whom I am under the necessity 
of having anything to do were doomed to partake of my misfort- 
unes. In order to vary the scene, and hoping to gather some intel- 
ligence of the Aspasia, 1 left Tortola the day before yesterday for 
this place. The distance is only about four hours' sail, but, as we 
left Tortola late in the afternoon, and had only a light breeze, we 
were under the necessity of being out in the night. About one 
o'clock I was awakened by a jar of the vessel, and at first presumed 
we were alongside some vessel in port, but a second shock, attended 
with a roar of the sea, undeceived me, and, on going on deck, I 
found we were on a dangerous reef of rocks. The vessel immedi- 
ately bilged, and the cabin filled with water. I had not time to get 
my little trunk up before everything in it was completely wet; and, 
while going ashore in the boat, we had a heavy rain, which wet me 
through, and in this situation had to remain on the shore till day- 
light ; yet I thought not of my own situation. To see the distress of 
the captain, who owned the vessel, which was the fruits of many 
years' hard labor, and that of the owner of the cargo and his family, 
who assembled shortly after our landing, and who had now lost 
their little all, and were reduced to beggary, was distressing in the 
extreme. They groaned, wrung their hands, tore their hair, stamped 



EFFORTS TO RECOVER HIS SHIP. 119 

on the ground, and, indeed, seemed distracted. But, enough; shall 
I never have anj^thing but scenes of distress to relate to you? I fear 
not, and wonder for what I am yet reserved. 

*' I can learn nothing of the Aspasia. If she has not arrived safe 
it may be best that I do not know it, for I have enough to bear al- 
ready." 

''ToRTOLA, May 2% 1807. 

**I have not been disappointed in my expectations. My vessel 
and cargo are condemned, and for reasons the most frivolous, which 
I have not now time to give you, for, after having engaged my pas- 
sage in a fast-sailing vessel for New York, and while comforting 
myself with the prospect of being soon by your side, the agent of 
the captors came forward, and offered me my ship and cargo for 
less than a third the original cost, and, as an additional inducement, 
was ready to engage that I should not again be molested by British 
cruisers. Can you conceive of more barefaced villainy? Yet, in 
order that I may leave nothing undone to save any portion of the 
unfortunate concern, I am going again to St. Thomas, to endeavor 
to raise the money by selling a part of the cargo, deliverable in Ha- 
vana, or by other means, so that I can realize thirty-five or forty 
thousand dollars, which will be better than having recourse to the 
Lords of Appeal in London and waiting one or tv/o years for their 
decision. 

* ' Nothing but a sense of duty should add a single day to the ab- 
sence which, has already been so tedious." 

** St. Thomas, May 24, 1809/ 
** The enlivening idea of shortly meeting you dissipates the gloom 
that would otherwise take possession of me, and is a consolation in 
my disappointment here in procuring funds for the ransom of my 
ship and cargo. I cannot raise the sum on any terms that will an- 
swer, and think now only of settling my affairs and returning to you 
as soon as possible. 

**I do not know that it is not for the best that I cannot compass 
my object; because, if I did, I must necessarily give up the appeal, 
and lose the insurance, which, I think, must have been made; but 
it was proper I should leave nothing undone that was in my power 
to save the property. To-morrow I shall go again to Tortola. I 



120 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

hope and trust for the last time, as every object that meets my view 
there is disgusting in the extreme. If I had time I would give you 
a sketch of it, but I must leave it till we meet. Would that I could 
sleep or remain insensible till that time. 

''June 6. — I am now on the point of embarking for home, after 
being completely stripped of the fruits of many years' hard toil. I 
say completely, though it may not be literally so, because there is 
hardly a doubt but some insurance is made for me ; and, if so, I do 
not see any way the underwriters can escape paying, though I doubt 
not they will try hard for it. But whatever subterfuges or cunning 
they may make use of for this purpose will have no tendency to 
lower my opinion of my fellow-mortals. After the villainy I have 
seen practised at Tortola, by men whose power and riches not only 
give them a currency among the most respectable, but make their 
society even courted, 1 blush for the baseness of mankind, and al- 
most lament that I am one of the same species. 

** I see by the papers that William has returned, and, while I re- 
joice that he is safe and well, I cannot help fearing he has not suc- 
ceeded according to his expectations, or he would not have returned 
so soon, as his ship was well fitted for a much longer absence; but 
it is, doubtless, all for the best. You will, perhaps, wonder at this 
observation from me at the moment when I am suffering such accu- 
mulated misfortunes; but continued resources present themselves, 
and, if I am not under the necessity of hanging on my friends, all 
will soon be right again. If I have the delight of finding you and 
the boy well I shall soon forget my sorrows, and two or three months 
at home will repay an age of care.'* 

His summing-up of the events of this outrage, as 
given in his published '^ ITarrative/' is so graphic and 
pathetic that I give it in full : 

''Having settled my accounts and. secured my appeal papers, I 
left Tortola on the 25th of May, more than a month fi'om the date 
of my arrival. During that month scarce a day had passed in which 
I was not subjected to some angry altercation, some unnecessary 
provocation, some feverish excitement from my opponents, or some 
trouble and anxiety from complaints and uneasiness of the officers 



A SUMMARY OF TRIALS. 121 

and crew of our ship; and this under the scorching influence of a 
vertical sun. But I had the happiness to escape the fever, which 
this combination of causes was calculated to produce, and to retain 
my health. As I left the harbor, on my way to St. Thomas, I passed 
near the Telemaco, which lay there by virtue of the right of the strong 
over the weak. The distinction between this act of piracy and those 
of a like character by the ancient buccaneers must be perceived to 
consist alone in the circumstance that the former is sanctioned by 
kindred banditti, termed a vice - admiralty court, and the latter 
were too magnanimous to practise such hypocrisy. The annals of 
the times, however, were fertile in the details of such atrocious inva- 
sions of the rights of neutrals, the one party justifying its thefts by 
those of the other. 

**To have practised the self-denial incident to leaving my family 
for so long a time ; to have succeeded in reaching Rio Janeiro after 
being dismasted and suffering all the toils and anxieties of a voyage 
of forty-three days in that crippled condition; to have surmounted 
the numerous obstacles and risks attendant on the peculiarity of the 
transactions in port; to have accomplished the business of lading 
and despatching the vessels, in defiance of great obstacles, and to 
perceive the fortune almost within my grasp which would secure 
me ease and independence for the remainder of my life — and then, 
by the irresistible means of brute force, to see the whole swept off, 
and myself and family thereby reduced in a moment from affluence 
to poverty, must be admitted to be a calamity of no ordinary magni- 
tude. It required, indeed, the exercise of great fortitude and pa- 
tience, and naturally led to the perception of the truth that we ex- 
perience a greater amount of misery from the evil passions of our 
fellow-men than from hurricanes, lightning, earthquakes, and the 
warring elements combined. Fortunately I possessed an elasticity 
of mind which adapted itself to circumstances. I was accustomed 
to contend with difficulties, and disciplined by a long course of loss- 
es and disappointments, and, when suffering under them, I habitu- 
ally looked round for the means to remedy them. I was soon ena- 
bled, therefore, to throw off much of the weight of this misfortune. 
Some mitigation of its effect was produced by the hope that insur- 
ance on the property might have been effected, and that the Aspasia 
might have accomplished her voyage successfully." 

6 



122 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

Just before arriving in l^ew York lie begins a letter, 
on the 29tli of June, 1807, in which occurs the follow- 
ing passage : 

** Although my misfartunes are of a very serious nature, yet you 
need not fear you wiU see me with a long face and a clouded brow ; 
for, whether ruined or not, the prospect of meeting you and the dear 
boy is enough to dissipate every gloomy idea; and if I find you both 
well, and can possibly stem the torrent without hanging on my 
friends, I will bid defiance to adversity. Indeed, I am astonished 
at the facility with which the niind can adapt itself to circumstances ; 
and although, before experiencing them, I was doubtful whether 
such accumulated misfortune would not be sufficient to drive reason 
from her throne, I now find that, so far from it, I eat as well, sleep 
as well, feel as well, and can set about remedying the evil with as 
much spirit as I ever could in my life. I am a little apprehensive, 
however, that those who become acquainted with the extent of my 
misfortunes will say — if not openly, at least secretly — 'That man 
must be guilty of murder or some dreadful crime to be so particu- 
larly marked for chastisement. * But these will be only the supersti- 
tious, and we will convince them that perseverance and enterprise 
will overcome the greatest obstacles.'' 

The news wliich met him on arrival was enougli to 
test severely his determination not to be cast down by 
adversity, and his first letter after landing, on the 4th of 
July, shows plainly how heavily it weighed upon his 
spirits. The account he gives of it in his "Narrative," 
however, cannot be condensed or improved. 

Learning that his cousin, Stephen Higginson, was in 
town, he lost no time in seeking him. 

"But it was hastening only to be the earlier acquainted with dis- 
asters even greater than I had imagined. On meeting him, I per- 
ceived a shadow cast over that benevolent countenance, which had 
hitherto always beamed with smiles and joy when meeting me after 
an absence, which argued but too clearly that my worst anticipa- 



TOTAL LOSS OF ALL HIS PROPERTY. 123 

tions were about being confirmed. He told me that, in consequence 
of some new orders in council about the time my letters were re- 
ceived, desiring insurance to be made, the oflSces became so alarmed 
that it could not be effected at a less premium than thirty-three and 
a third per cent. , which my friends would not consent to give ; hence 
no insurance had been made on the property, and the loss 'was for 
account of Mr. Shaler and myself. 

**Nor was this all; he was grieved to say that the Aspasia and 
cargo were also a total loss. The melancholy detail was that she 
had arrived safe at Havana and sold the cargo at $15 per quintal, 
and with the proceeds— about $60,000— had laden with coffee and 
sugar for New York; that when off Cape Hatteras a gale was en- 
countered, in which she was thrown on her beam-ends and half filled 
with water, which ruined the cargo. The master, Eogers, was 
swept away and lost, and she finally reached Norfolk in a most dis- 
tressed state, where the amount of all that was saved was little more 
than enough to pay the wages of the men. To crown the whole, 
the agent in New York had not been informed of the shipment from 
Havana, and consequently no insurance had been effected. I could 
not imagine any addition to these misfortunes because I had nothing 
more at risk, yet I perceived that there was something to be yet un- 
folded. To this overwhelming detail was yet to be added another 
item, which would fill my cup to overflowing — the failure of a 
friend and relation on whose paper I was an endorser, and had be- 
come responsible for $6000. The aggregate of these losses, estimat- 
ing the value of the Telemaco's cargo at the rate at which the Aspa- 
sia's was sold, and the ship at what w^as paid for her, and independent 
of all profit on an investment of the funds at Havana for New York, 
would amount to $150,000. All doubts relative to the entire pros- 
tration of my fortune were now dissolved, all hope of there being 
some remnant left was annihilated, and the world was to be begun 
anew under the pressure of increased responsibilities. But the re- 
flection that no part of the property was on credit, that I had not 
involved others in my losses, was eminently consolatory. And the 
pleasing contemplation of meeting my family again after this first 
and long absence from them, and before having experienced any- 
thing of the inconvenience and embarrassment resulting from such 
misfortunes, combined to check their naturally depressing effect on 
my spirits. 



124 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

** Those who have found sufficient interest in the preceding pages 
to be induced to follow me in my subsequent enterprises will find 
abundant evidence that my forebodings w^ere fully realized in the 
repeated, long, and painful separations from those whom it was no 
less my duty than it would have been my happiness to watch over 
and protect. Compelled to navigate for the support of my family, 
and deprived in consequence of superintending the education of my 
children, worn with anxiety, and sick at heart with hope deferred, 
it will be seen that I was for many years an exile from all that ren- 
dered life dear and desirable ; and this as a consequence of the rob- 
bery of my hard-earned fortune by Admiral Cochrane. If his en- 
joyment of this property, so wickedly obtained, bears any proportion 
to the years of suffering caused the proprietor by its loss, it affords 
the strongest presumptive evidence of a perversion of mind which 
must meet its correction hereafter.'* 



CHAPTER VII. 

1808, 1809. 

The Embargo. — ^Voyage to Africa. — Goes to England in Search of 
Business. — Thence, Secretly, to Holland, and Home as Bearer of 
Despatches. —Voyage to Naples. — Vessel and Cargo Seized and 
Confiscated. — Life at Naples and Kome. 

The year 1808 was marked in commercial annals by 
the embargo, which was rendered necessary by the spo- 
liations of tlie English, and which necessarily put a stop 
to all nautical enterprises from this country. Merchants 
who had ships abroad of course hastened to get them 
home before the enforcement of the decree, and my fa- 
ther was employed by the owners of a Salem vessel to 
go in search of her to the coast of Africa and bring her 
home without delay. The latest accounts of the vessel 
were that, after having collected a rich cargo, the cap- 
tain had died, and the mate was finishing the work of 
disposing of what remained of the outward cargo. The 
errand was successfully accomplished, and after its com- 
pletion he took passage, via Halifax, for England, in 
order to place himself in the current of business and be 
ready to avail himself of any opportunity that might 
offer a prospect of lucrative returns. 

Owing to adverse winds they arrived at Halifax too 
late for the Falmouth packet, and waited a fortnight 
for an opportunity to embark ; then sailed in a brig 



126 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

bound for Locliraine, on the Clyde, where he arrived on 
the 4th of October. 

From thence he travelled to London by post, "mak- 
ing the journey in four days, with a degree of comfort, 
ease, and celerity such as, probably, could not be expe- 
rienced at the time in any other country in the world.'' 

The number of French prizes which had been brought 
into Plymouth, and the consequent abundance and 
cheapness of French wines, suggested the advantage of 
taking a cargo of them to the Isle of France ; and, while 
in doubt as to the means of accomplishing it, he met 
accidentally with a friend just arrived in a fine ship for 
which he had no fixed destination. Entering into ar- 
rangements with him, they purchased a quantity of 
wine, and had nearly completed the preparations for 
taking it on board when they were forced to abandon it 
by the enactment of some new regulations which pre- 
vented their obtaining the requisite clearance, without 
which insurance could not be effected. During this 
period he writes as follows : 

"London, December 13, 1808. 
"While waiting for the decision of the commissioners of excise 
relative to our business,! have filled up the time as much as possible 
in visiting the various objects most worthy the stranger's attention, 
particularly those I did not see when I was formerly here, such as 
the British Museum, several private exhibitions of wonderful mech- 
anism; Greenwich, the Magdalen, and Foundling hospitals; and 
Mr. West's collection of paintings. I was introduced to Mr. West, 
a good-looking man between fifty and sixty, whose placid counte- 
nance indicates a mind that has not been agitated by the passions 
with which mankind are generally afflicted from jarring interests 
and the necessary intercourse with each other. I soon discovered 
that he had a correct way of thinking on politics, and therefore 



LETTER FROM LONDON. 127 

had a long conversation with him on the subject. As, from his pro- 
fession and studies, he must be totally unprejudiced, and must nec- 
essarily view the subject on the grand scale, unbiassed by any of 
those mean considerations which lead the generality of mankind to 
subscribe to one opinion in preference to another, you will naturally 
suppose I was delighted to perceive how we harmonized. Kotwith- 
standing he admits the troubles of Europe to have been great for 
these several years past, he thinks them as nothing compared to 
what they will be, and he considers the embargo in America as the 
wisest measure the government could have adopted, and the only 
preventive to her participating in the calamities with which Eu- 
rope is afflicted. Ruin to some and great inconvenience to all the 
commercial interests must doubtless result from it, but he was clear- 
ly of opinion that it was the least of two evils, the only wise measure 
that could have been adopted, and ought to be persisted in. 

''Indeed, my dear, after the rejection by this government of the 
proposals made by Mr. Pinckney, which you will learn by the Hope, 
it is my opinion that those who are desirous of having the embargo 
raised know not the interests of their country, or, knowing them 
and continuing in the desire, are not worthy the name of Americans. 
But those, I believe, will be few. After the election is decided, I 
have no doubt the Federals will agree to the wisdom of the measures. 

"But enough of politics. Shaler left here for Holland about a 
month before my arrival. I regretted exceedingly not having fallen 
in with him, because I wished him to have been interested in my 
present expedition, though, if it should prove unsuccessful, I should 
regret much that he was engaged in it, so that I have less anxiety. 
I have not yet heard from him, although I have written him two or 
three times. He thinks of returning to America in the spring, and 
I hope he will make you a visit at Lancaster. 

"I have given George sketches of several expeditions, with the 
view that, if affairs continue as they are, he may take advantage of 
them by coming to this country and placing himself in fortune's 
way. William will doubtless remain at home, if not till my return, 
at least till he knows the issue of my voyage ; for, if we obtain the 
clearance I expect to have, I flatter myself I shall make enough to 
secure us both against the necessity of ever leaving our dear wives 



128 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT XAYIGATOR. 

The disappointment of being forced to abandon this 
voyage \va& great, as he had formed saiiguine liopes of 
very lucrative results; but its force was in some degree 
mitigated by an advance in the price of wines which 
secured a very considerable profit on a resale of those 
they had purchased. 

While on his way to Plymouth to attend to this bnsi 
iiess he was attacked with pleurisy at Exeter, and had 
a very narrow escape from death, which would proba- 
bly have resulted, but for the attentions of his friends 
in London, in sending an experienced nurse, to whose 
care he always felt himself indebted for his life. The 
effect of this was so serions that his recovery was de- 
layed, and he was urged by his physician to seek a 
milder climate till his health was fully restored. 

From the window of his sick-room in Exeter, before 
he was well enough to be removed to London, he saw 
tlie remnant of the army just landed at Plj^mouth from 
Corunna, after the memorable retreat under Sir John 
Moore, who was killed on the eve of its embarkation, 
and I have often heard him speak with nnicli feeling 
of the utterly wretched and woebegone appearance they 
presented as they passed through the town. 

His letters from London, during the whole period of 
his prolonged detention, betray continually his affec- 
tionate nature and his longings -for home, and at the 
same time the activity of his mind in studying and de- 
vising means for retrieving his fortune, to the end that 
he might secure the gratification he so coveted. The 
following extract from a single letter may serve as a 
sample of the tone which pervades them all ; 



PROJECTED VOYAGES. 129 

** London, April 29, 1809. 
** Another opportunity for America enables me to assure you that 
I am now quite strong, and even in better flesh than before my ill- 
ness. 

"3f * * ^ ¥r * * 

**0n the receipt of a letter of this late date, you will wonder if I 
never intend leaving London, and what charms I find to keep me 
here. Indeed, my dear, if no other enjoyment was found than I 
have experienced here, few strangers would visit it to wear off their 
ennui. It is to be presumed, however, that those who come here 
for that purpose have minds more at ease than that of your husband. 

' ' Neither would I be understood to imply that I have not partaken 
of many of the recreations this great city affords; but while adniir- 
ing the wonderful powers of a Siddons or a Kemble in tragedy, the 
fine music and dancing at the opera, the perfect deception of some 
of the panoramas, etc., the enjoyment has always been dampened 
by the reflection on my pecuniary embarrassments, and the conse- 
quence which follows as its shadow — the necessity of absence from 
home and the domestic enjoyments — compared with which every- 
thing this gay city can offer is as *dust in the balance.' While 
speaking of theatres, I believe I have not told you that the two 
great ones of London, Covent Garden and Drury Lane, have been 
destroyed by fire, the former about a month before my arrival, the 
latter while I was at Exeter, and, as a consequence, a great many in- 
dustrious people have been thrown out of employment, and a great 
many idle ones disappointed of their accustomed amusement. 

*'I had flattered myself with the hope that by this opportunity I 
should have been able to inform you what plan I intended pursuing, 
but am sorry to say I am as yet unable to do so. I have several ob- 
jects in view; but such are the changes in the disposition of the 
governments of the two great belligerents towards America, such 
orders and counter-orders, decrees and revocations, that the plan de- 
termined on to-day must be abandoned to-morrow. I am thinking 
of charteriug a vessel for the Baltic, there to lade with Eussian manu- 
factures for America. This speculation on a large capital would 
give a very handsome return, but on so small an amount as I can 
control it would be but a bare living. A voyage to the Isle of 
France is almost the only one not affected by the raising of the em- 
6^ 



]30 VOYAGES OF A MERCHxlNT NAVIGATOR. 

bargo, which can be prosecuted with much chance of success. This, 
to be undertaken from hence in a swift sailing-vessel with such a 
cargo as could be easily procured, would give an immense profit, 
but as the island is declared in a state of blockade, it can only be 
undertaken in a vessel that can be depended on for her superior 
sailing, and such are not always to be met with. If I go to Russia 
and meet with no accidents, I shall be with you in August or Sep- 
tember. If I pursue the other plan, it will probably absorb another 
year; but I need not assure you how earnestly I wish the time of 
our separation passed; how much I long to see you and all the 
cheerful circle at home. It is, indeed, cruel and mortifying to be 
obliged to wander from such a home, after making such exertions 
and sacrifices as I have made ; yet, even among the small circle of 
Americans now here, I can look round and see several (perhaps 
more deserving than myself) who have greater cause to complain 
of Fortune. It is doubtless best to endeavor to persuade ourselves 
that it is all right; but it is no easy task." 

Before he recovered his strength sufficiently to at- 
tempt tlie execution of any of tliese plans, a new one 
presented itself which seemed sufficiently promising to 
w^arrant the necessary risk attending it. This was the 
"taking of a cargo from Holland to the United States. 
The difficulty was in getting from England to Holland 
at the time when all the Continental powers had been 
compelled by JSTapoleon to unite in cutting off all inter- 
course with Great Britain. 

It was impossible openly to evade such restriction, 
and the risk was, of course, very great in attempting it 
secretly, but perhaps for that very reason all the more 
tempting to one of such adventurous disposition. 

With his usual caution he refrained from mention- 
ing in his letters anything that could afford a clew to 
his real design, but merely tells his wife that he was 
about undertaking a journey for which he required only 



SECRET LANDING IN HOLLAND. 131 

what baggage he could carry in his hand^ and had there- 
fore shipped his trunks on a vessel bound for Boston, 
and hoped, ere long, to follow them in person. He then, 
in company with a friend who had been associated with 
him in the purchase and sale of the wine, embarked on 
board a fishing-smack the master of which had agreed 
to land them on the coast of Holland. Approaching 
the shore on a still night, and after listening for a time 
to make sure they w^ere unobserved, they were landed 
between eleven and twelve o'clock among the sand 
dunes of the coast near The Brielle. The skipper had 
given them careful instructions as to their course, and 
they made their way towards the town till they could 
hear the clocks striking, and then waited for daylight in 
a hollow of the hills of sand. 

At dawn they were aroused by a trampling w^hicli 
they were apprehensive might be the patrol, but which 
proved to be only a herd of cows driven by a boy who 
was greatly alarmed at seeing them, but was speedily 
pacified, and directed them to an inn, where they were 
cordially welcomed by the host and hostess, who had 
no sjanpathy with the rigorous exclusion of strangers. 
After a good breakfast and careful instructions from 
the landlord, they went with a crowd of passengers on 
board a canal-boat, and proceeded without molestation 
to Amsterdam. 

They found at once that their expectation of large 
profits on the exports of Plolland to the United States 
would be realized if they could succeed in despatching 
a cargo before the 1st of July, when the English govern- 
ment had given notice that a blockade would commence. 



132 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

With tlie aid of an influential mercantile lionse this was 
accomplished. A ship was chartered, loaded, and de- 
spatched to New York before the blockade began. She 
arrived safely, and the results of the voyage were quite 
equal to their anticipations. He had intended taking 
passage for home in this ship, but meeting in Amster- 
dam with his old friend Shaler, he was induced to re- 
main in order to unite with him in the execution of a 
plan which promised an immense result, but which they 
were forced to abandon in consequence of the combined 
obstacles of the invasion of the Scheldt by a formidable 
force under Lord Chatham, and a general embargo in 
Holland. 

This seemed to cut off the possibility even of egress 
from the country except by land ; but fortunately the 
American minister to France, General Armstrong, w^as 
then on a visit to Holland, and being desirous of send- 
ing despatches to his government, obtained the release 
of the ship Montezuma^ of Baltimore, from the embargo, 
and my father took passage in her for that port as 
bearer of despatches. The ship being in ballast, no 
cause existed for detention by British cruisers ; but they 
had proceeded but little way from port before they 
Avere boarded from a frigate with the inquiry why they 
were released from the embargo. 

On being informed that it was by special permission, 
at the request of the American minister, who wished 
to send despatches to the United States of w^hich my 
father was the bearer, the officer desired him to ac- 
company the captain of the Montezuma on board the 
frigate, taking with him the despatches. This w\as de- 



RETURNS TO THE UNITED STATES. ' I33 

clined, as was also the request to send the despatches 
on board by the captain. The boarding officer then 
threatened to nse compulsion. By this time the frigate 
had drawn near and was hailed by the boarding officer, 
who informed his superior that there was a bearer of 
despatches to the United States government on board 
who refused to leave the ship or give up the despatches 
except on compulsion. 

" Then let him stay and be damned," was the reply, 
and the ship's papers being found to* be in order, they 
were permitted to proceed on their course. 

They arrived in Baltimore on the 3d of l^ovember, 
after a long and stormy passage, and my father having 
suflEered greatly from a bilious fever, contracted by too 
early an exposure to the damp atmosphere of Holland 
after his severe illness at Exeter, was too feeble to go 
to Washington, and accordingly delivered the despatches 
to the collector of the port to be forwarded. 

After waiting a day or two in Baltimore to recruit, 
lie proceeded by easy stages to his home in Lancaster, 
Massachusetts, where he arrived on the 12tli of Novem- 
ber in a weak and emaciated condition. 

One month later, on the 3d of December, 1 809, he again'*' 
left his home on a new excursion to Europe, induced by 
tlie first intelligence of a departure from the rigid ex- 
clusion of foreign commerce, which had so long been 
maintained. The port of Naples was opened to neutral 
commerce wath such appearance of good faith that in- 
surance on adventures there could be effected at reason- 
able rates. 

He immediately went to Boston and purchased the 



134 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

schooner Maria^ of one hundred and seventy tons, and 
took on board a valuable cargo for account of mer- 
chants in Boston, on condition of receiving half profits 
in lieu of freight. 

He arrived safely at Naples, and was subjected to a 
very long quarantine ; the tedium of which was relieved 
by the information that no article of his cargo would 
produce less than one hundred per cent proiit, and this 
notwithstanding the fact that before the term of quar- 
antine had expired upward of thirty vessels arrived 
from the United States, allured by the flattering pros- 
pect presented by the opening of a port which had so 
long been closed. 

But by a refinement of baseness and cruelty to which 
it would be hard to find a parallel in the history of the 
civilized world, the game being thus enticed within the 
power of Napoleon, the net was sprung, and every ves- 
sel was seized and confiscated. Without even the for- 
mality of a trial the cargoes were taken out and sold, 
together with the vessels, in the most hurried manner 
and for prompt payment. 

My father's reflections upon the moral aspect of this 
robbery as compared with that he had previously suf- 
fered at the hands of Lord Cochrane are such as w^ould 
occur to any upright mind in comparing the act of the 
highwayman who demands your money at the muzzle 
of a pistol with that of the swindler who robs you un- 
der the form of law. 

In the first case there is no prostitution of common- 
sense and common honesty in seeking for a cause of 
condemnation which is already determined on. In the 



NAPLES AND ROME. 135 

second there is a hypocritical pretence of seeking jus- 
tice by the formality of a trial, where in reality the case 
is prejudged. 

In this abominable transaction there is no doubt the 
great mover was Napoleon, whose mandate Murat had 
not the moral courage to disobey, preferring the dis- 
honor and infamy of such treachery to the momentary 
displeasure of the emperor. There were a great num- 
ber of people at Naples who were desirous of provid- 
ing themselves with many articles of the various car- 
goes, but were deterred by conscientious scruples from 
purchasing at the government sales, being convinced 
that the "receiver is as bad as the thief." 

Being tlms involuntarily relieved of business, and 
finding no immediate opportunity of returning to the 
United States, he improved the opportunity for visiting 
and inspecting the numerous interesting localities and 
objects in the vicinity of Naples, and then went to 
Rome, where he passed several weeks. All these scenes 
are now so familiar to thousands of our country men 
and women that it is difficult to realize the fact that, 
even within the memory of many who are still living, 
the man who had actually visited and examined them 
was regarded with w^onder and interest. In all my boy- 
isli days I remember that the portfolios of plates of 
Naples,Yesuvi us, Pompeii, and Eome which he brought 
home with him were a source of untiring interest to 
visitors at our pleasant Lancaster home, and many pleas- 
ant associations of my early days were touched when 
they finally perished in the great fire of Chicago. Of 
his experiences while visiting these places he gives a 



136 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOH. 

detailed description in a closely written manuscript of 
more than fifty pages of letter-sheet, prepared for my 
motlier's gratification, in so pleasant and graphic a style 
that it might well take its place among the best ac- 
counts that have been given of the now familiar scenes. 
It is rare that even a single expression betrays the fact 
that his mind was oppressed with the sense of his disap- 
pointment, w^hile it evinces throughout a keen appre- 
ciation of the poetic associations which hallowed every 
object. 

It would be idle, however, at this day, to quote his 
descriptions, and I shall give only an occasional extract 
w^hich may serve to illustrate his own character. 

The following is from his earliest account of Naples : 

** The shore from the foot of Vesuvius, where is situated the town 
of Portici, quite to the city of Naples, presents a continued line of 
villas, palaces, and houses, and Naples rising in amphitheatre, till in 
one direction it terminates in the magnificent castle of St. Elmo, and 
in another that of the palace of Cabo di Monti, is impressive of 
riches, grandeur, and strength. 

** A further acquaintance, however, with Naples will considerably 
lessen such impressions; but such acquaintance cannot be made by 
those who come by sea, till they have done penance in the perform- 
ance of a tedious quarantine. Ours, in consequence of having cot- 
ton goods on board, exceeded forty days. After a passage across the 
Atlantic 'and Mediterranean seas, to be confined so long on board 
our vessel after arrival would be tedious even with bright prospects 
in view, but when instead of these we had no other than total loss 
of property, and possibly imprisonment, they were gloomy indeed. 
Could I have foreseen the issue I should certainly have attempted 
to make my escape, and have no doubt I could have effected it with 
less risk than we ran in the Lelia Byrd in passing the fort at San 
Diego; but while I had the opportunity (which was for ten days 
after my arrival), our affairs had not assumed so decisive and seri- 



NAPLES. 137 

ous an aspect, and I was afterwards deterred from making the at- 
tempt by the reflection that in case of failure (should American 
property he restored), I should forfeit both property and insurance. 
A few days after being released from quai-antine I took rooms oppo- 
site the beautiful public walk called Villa Real. This walk is con- 
siderably longer and broader than the Mall in Boston. The trees 
are yet small; but there are many flowering shrubs, and the whole 
place is kept extremely clean and in good order. 

** As you know I am no inconsiderable pedestrian, you will natu- 
rally suppose I have spent much time here; indeed, many is the 
hour that I have traced and retraced my solitary steps on this walk, 
and thought of home and its enjoyments, of my distance from it, 
and the possibility that a war might lengthen the time of my sepa- 
ration from those nearest my heart for an indefinite period." 

I give but a single extract from one of many descrip- 
tions of excursions in the neighborhood of Naples : 

** We had a fatiguing march to gain the summit of the promon- 
tory (of Miscnum), but were repaid by a most delightful view. The 
day was pleasant (22d April), and the atmosphere very clear, so that 
we could see the town of Gaeta and the little island of Ponza, the 
Apennines covered with snow. These were the most distant objects. 
Nearer, we had a view of Vesuvius, the Castle of St. Elmo, Pozzuoli, 
Solfatara, Monte Nuovo, the Lake of Fusaro, the islands of Ischia, 
Procida, and Capri, and the Bay of Naples. The prospect from this 
hill has been spoken of in extravagant terms by all those travellers 
who have taken the pains to ascend it. It is certainly beautiful ; but 
that from the dome of the State House in Boston in the month of 
June, in my opinion, surpasses it. 

** There is not so much of the grand and terrific to admire, it is 
true ; but instead of a country which has the appearance of a stormy 
ocean, and where the valleys only are cultivated, ours, in every di- 
rection, presents a picture of the most luxuriant fertility; instead of 
the silence and gloom which reigns in the bay and ports, ours is ac- 
tivity and cheerfulness; in fine, instead of old age and decrepitude, 
ours is youth, vigor, and gayety. That such an opinion would be 
considered that of a stupid and prejudiced blockhead by those whose 



138 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

minds are impressed by the beauty of the Elysian Fields and its 
neighborhood from the accounts given by Virgil in the ^neid I am 
perfectly aware, but as they will probably remain uninformed of 
my having held such heretical opinions I shall give myself no un- 
easiness about it. The cape and promontory of Misenum takes its 
name from one Misenus, a companion of ^neas, who died and was 
buried here, as the poet thus relates: 

*' ' The good ^neas ordered on the shore 
A stately tomb, whose top a trumpet bore, 
A soldier's falchion, and a seaman's oar. 
Thus was his friend interred, and doubtless fame 
Still to the lofty cape consigns his name.' 

**It was along this coast — Misenum, Baia, etc. — that the Eoman 
grandees had their villas. Here, from the salubrity of the climate, 
the hot baths, and probably also from that attraction so conspicuous 
at Ballstown, to see and be seen, crowds of strangers as well as the neigh- 
boring inhabitants used to resort. It is the residence which Clodius 
reproached Cicero for occupying, as being little calculated for a 
philosopher, and where Propertius forbid his daughter Cynthia's go- 
ing, as being dangerous for the innocence of young persons. Ruins 
and ashes are all that remain of former magnificence and splendor." 

From ]N"aples he went with two companions to Rome, 
making the journey in a carriage drawn by mules, and 
spending three days on the road. 

His descriptions of the wonders of that city are 
marked by the same graphic and simple character whicli 
distinguisli his writings. He concludes as follows : 

''Though a residence of a few weeks in such a city as Rome is 
enough to give some travellers (even though unacquainted with the 
language) a perfect knowledge of the character, disposition, man- 
ners, amusements, etc., of the inhabitants, I confess to you I am not 
one of the number, for even if my penetration w^ere as great, my 
naturally reserved habits would be a preventive, and you will, 
therefore, be satisfied with my mentioning a few peculiarities in 
their customs wMch came immediately within my observation. 



ROME. 139 

'« We took no other introductory letter than one to a rich banker 
(the Duke of Torlonia), at whose house we were, of course, invited 
to dine. At table everything was conducted much as in other parts 
of the civilized world; but judge of our surprise at the meanness of 
the master who could suffer his servant to come to our lodgings a 
few days after to inform us that he had the honor of waiting on us 
at dinner the other day! in other words, that the master drew upon 
a dinner he gave to strangers for the purpose of paying his servant's 
wages. What a disgusting custom ! But it is even practised at the 
governor's, where we were invited to a ball, and a day or two after 
the servants called for their fee! 

''The beaux and belles of Kome have their Corso as well as those 
of Naples, where they ride every evening, and, returning, stop for 
half an hour at the Plaza del Popolo, to see and be seen. Such is 
the all-commanding power of custom or fashion, here as elsewhere, 
that, notwithstanding the numerous beautiful gardens in the vicinity 
of Rome where they might either ride or walk free from annoy mce, 
they prefer driving to and fro on the crowded Corso, where they 
sometimes risk suffocation from the clouds of dust. A peculiarity 
in the funerals, both at Naples and Eome, I have observed in no 
other part of the world ; I mean that of dressing the corpse in the 
best apparel and carrying it through the streets on a bier exposed to 
the view of every one. It is a disgusting custom. 

** Foreigners have always found the beggars of Italy very trouble- 
some, though less so at Rome than at Naples. The late revolution 
in the fortunes of the cardinals and higher orders of the clergy has 
thrown upon the world a crowd of their domestics and dependants, 
and we were frequently asked charity in the most pressing manner 
by well-dressed people of both sexes, whose exterior and address 
evinced that they had seen better days. 

**No one acquainted with the history of Rome who sees it at 
the present day can help reflecting on the vicissitude of all earthly 
things. A city whose population was once counted by millions, 
now possessing only about one hundred thousand and rapidly de- 
clining; whose former inhabitants, commanded by warlike emperors 
and generals, were irresistible in the field, and gave laws to the world; 
whose present, governed by a pope, priests, and monks, are finally 
the slaves of one of their former provinces. The present rulers. 



140 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

however, are troubled by no such reflections as these. They appear 
to act as we have reason to suppose that former conquerors have 
done. They appropriate the spoils to their own use, and though 
they do not sell the inhabitants of conquered countries, yet they are 
scarcely less slaves than if they did.* 

''Could a Curtius or a Horatius Codes be found among modern 
Romans? Could that man be found among them who, like Marcus 
Sca3vola, when made prisoner would thrust his hand into the lire, 
and burn it off in presence of the conqueror to convince him that a 
Roman could not be frightened by threats? I think we may safely 
say such characters no longer exist in Rome. A Ravaillac might 
possibly be met with, but no Brutus. The stimulus which once ex- 
cited to heroic deeds has long since given way to the effeminacy of 
a monkish government, which has led to beggary and ruin," 

On retnrning to ISTaples from Eoine he found that 
Captain Fairfield, of the ship Margaret^ of Salem, had 
succeeded in making an arrangement with the govern- 
ment by which he was permitted to return to the Unit- 
ed States, carrying as passengers the crews of the ves- 
sels which had been seized, and he was congratulating 
himself on the opportunity thus afforded him of return- 
ing home. His disappointment was correspondingly 
great at being obliged to abandon the hope,' as Captain 
Fairfield declined to take as freight a vahiable invest- 
ment of Italian manufactures of which my father had 
agreed to take charge. In this, as in repeated other in- 
stances, the event proved that what he had bewailed as 
a misfortune was in fact an escape from a fearful com- 
bination of horrors. The Margaret was upset at sea. 
A part of those on board escaped in a boat and were 
saved after great suffering ; part perished miserably on 
the wreck, and a few were rescued from it in a dying 
condition. 



A PRIEST'S WEAKNESS. 141 

In connection with this subject the following extract 
from the last letter of my father to my mother before 
leaving Naples is interesting. He had been expressing 
the disappointment he felt at not being able to take 
passage in tlie Margaret^ but finds consolation in the 
fact that the effect of it had been less disastrous than 
in a case which had just come to his knowledge : 

*' This is that of Dr. Cancanning, who, appointed by the pope a 
bishop of the Catholic Church in America, had been trying in vain 
for a year to procure a passage, till the opportunity offered by the 
Margaret, He had come from Rome with all his movables, engaged 
his passage, and paid his portion of the expense of stores, when he 
received a notification from the prefect of police that he would not 
be permitted to depart in an American vessel. The disappointment 
was so great and had such an effect upon him that he survived it 
but three days. He was a healthy, good-looking man of about sixty, 
of Irish descent. I became acquainted with him at Rome, where he 
had long resided, and from whence the present condition of things 
led him often to express his joy at the prospect of removal. 

**I suspect the calm, pacific, tranquil life of a priest, even with 
all the help they may derive from Heaven, is not so well calculated 
to train the mind to contend with disappointment and the vicissi- 
tudes of fortune as the rough and troubled life of the soldier or the 
sailor, who is inured to them. Poor human nature ! To be assail- 
able by fortune at the age of sixty ! To die from the very fear of 
dying! How melancholy, how degrading the reflection! My dear 
boys must early become accustomed to hardships. They have a 
prospect of living in turbulent times, when the civil must be sub- 
servient to military authority, when the only right that is acknowl- 
edged will be that of power, and consequently they must by the im- 
provement of their talents and early acquaintance with danger be- 
come masters, or by the neglect of them and a retired life submit to 
be slaves. I have ordered a copy of the ' Travels of Count Beniow- 
ski ' and of Plutarch. These ought to be their study till they have 
them by heart, and if afterwards they should die at sixty of disap- 
pointment 111 disown them." 



CHAPTER VIII. 

1810. 
From Italy to Lisbon and thence to England. 

Having failed to get passage home in the Margaret^ 
he next wrote to London for a British license to lade a 
vessel for England. This arrived in due season, and be- 
ing provided with the credit to enable him to use i^fc to 
advantage, he purchased the brig Nancy Ann (one of 
the condemned vessels), and loaded her with a cargo of 
wine, raw silk, licorice, rags, etc., for London. 

No objection was made to his departure, and the pas- 
sage down the Mediterranean was a very pleasant one. 
On approaching the Strait of Gibraltar he was chase^ 
for more than half a day by an English brig-of-war, and 
paid no attention to the occasional discharge of a gun 
till she approached nearly within cannon-shot, when he 
rounded to, and a boat was immediately sent to take 
him and his papers on board for examination. On see- 
ing the documents by which he was screened from Eng- 
lish aggression, which emanated from the same author- 
ity as his own commission, the commander was furious 
with rage at having been unnecessarily led so far out of 
his way. But after expending a deal of profanity, and 
threatening to send him in to Gibraltar, he finally calmed 
down, and perceiving that he could inflict no punish- 



CONCEALED FREIGHT. 143 

ment that would not be likely to recoil upon himself, 
he reluctantly consented to suffer him to pursue his 
course. 

This was the only detention he met with, and his es- 
cape from search in this case enabled him to carry out 
successfully a part of his plan which did not appear on 
the manifest. 

I have mentioned that Captain Fairfield's reason for 
refusing to take my father as passenger on the Mar- 
garet was, because he desired to take with him as freight 
a quantity of Italian manufactures of which he had 
charge, which would have affected the sale of those 
which Captain Fairfield himself was carrying. 

This was an invoice of sewing-silks which my father 
had purchased for account of Messrs. John Tappan, 
Stephen Higginson, and himself, and which he now had 
on board his vessel concealed under the rags, licorice, 
etc., which comprised his cargo for London. As his 
English license allowed no manufactured goods, its dis- 
covery would have led to the seizure of the vessel, and 
I' as the same result would have ensued had the goods 
' been taken to England, his intention was to put into 
Lisbon and transship the silks from thence to the Unit- 
ed States; and this he successfully accomplished. The 
silk reached America in safety and sold for about $150,- 
000, and my father made about $20,000 by the opera- 
tion. 

On entering the Tagus and coming to anchor near 
the Belem Castle, he found he had arrived at a critical 
moment. The French army under Massena was advanc- 
ing with a confidence inspired by the acknowledged 



144 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

talents and invariable success of that great soldier, and 
the combined English and Portuguese forces awaited 
the attack with no less trust in the skill and intrepidity 
of Sir Arthur Welleslej, whose lines of defence at Torres 
Vedras were deemed impregnable. The inhabitants of 
Lisbon were, of course, in the painful condition of anx- 
iety incident to the uncertain state of affairs, and were 
preparing for the possible necessity of putting their 
valuables on board the English ships of war, and, that 
no means of escape might be lost, an embargo was laid 
on all vessels in port. 

Affairs remained in this critical state for about ten 
days, which was also the period of quarantine to w^hich 
my father was subjected. At the end of that time it 
was announced that Massena had decided not to risk an 
attack and had begun his retreat. The embargo w^as 
immediately raised, and the anxious inhabitants of Lis- 
bon once more breathed freely. My father effected the 
transshipment of the silk, and disposed of the wine 
which had formed part of his cargo to the commissary 
of tlie army, on very advantageous terms. The tone of 
his letters at once reveals the relief he experienced at 
the dawning of better prospects, and at the same time 
the consciousness of the uncertainties of life as evinced 
by the loss of the Margaret^ the news of w^hich reached 
him here. His first letter to my mother begins as fol- 
lows : 

'* Lisbon, /Sl^i^fewJ^?* 9, 1810. 

''Having escaped the pirates of all nations (for government ships 
of the present day deserve no better name), and arrived safely at 
this point of my voyage, you will naturally conceive that my mind 
is relieved from a great weight of anxiety, as the trifling premium 



LETTER FHOM LISBON. 145 

that will be paid on the property from hence to America, and the 
great profit it will undoubtedly command, will justify insuring 
roundly on the profits, so that beggary and starvation which have 
so long been staring me in the face have, I think, made a retrograde 
movement. But poor Fairfield, when on his way home with a good 
cargo, doubtless considered his prospects equally flattering. What 
a dreadful reverse! and with what circumstances of superlative 
misery was not the loss of the Margaret attended. Of some of my 
acquaintance who were on her I know nothing, of others dying on 
the wreck, and others escaping with the bare remains of life, per- 
haps to linger a burden to themselves and all around them. The 
melancholy recital is constantly haunting me, and not the less from 
the reflection that the chance was equal that I had added to the 
number of the miserable. As I considered the opportunity a very 
excellent one, I had written you a very long letter, which, together 
with those for Stephen Higginson, I confided to the care of Mr. 
Louis Barney of Baltimore, an excellent young man, of whose fate I 
have as yet seen no account. 

** So much time will be absorbed by the necessary delays here and 
after my arrival in England that it will be impossible for me to ar- 
rive in America till after winter sets in, and rather than contend 
with the discomfort and danger of coming on the coast at that sea- 
son, I have written to Stephen proposing to wear away the winter 
by undertaking another expedition to Naples, and doubt not he will 
readily agree to it, of which I shall be advised on arrival in London. 
I need not say how anxiously I shall expect letters also from you. 
To know that you are well, to have your congratulations on my 
success, to know all that concerns the health and happiness of my 
dear boys, and all the dear circle at home, is more interesting than a 
world of fortune. 

''Before you receive this I suppose America will have an addi- 
tion to the men of distinction who have sought her shores, unless 
some greedy man-of-war should have detained him for purposes of 
robbery. I mean Lucien Bonaparte, who was to have sailed from 
Civita Yecchia a few days before I left Naples in the ship IlerculeSy 
of Salem. His collection of statuary and paintings is doubtless su- 
perior to anything of the kind in America. I hope, therefore, he 
may arrive in safety." 



146 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

A few days later he writes again as follows : 

** Lisbon, September 13, 1810. 

** I wrote you a few days since by the Albert^ Captain Smith. , , . 

** I have proposed to Stephen to make another voyage this winter 
up the Mediterranean; but how far the new measures the emperor 
is taking will affect the plan I cannot determine before arriving in 
London. I learn that he has actually written a love-letter to our 
minister at Paris, promising restitution for confiscated property, re- 
voking his Berlin and Milan decrees, admitting a free commerce 
even in colonial produce, and declaring that the prosperity and hap- 
piness of the United States is an object he has at heart, or words to 
that effect. All this is no doubt as sincere as were his professions 
of being a good Mussulman when in Egypt, and the motives no 
doubt the same— to gull us; and, in my opinion, there is as little doubt 
that we shall swallow the bait, and when the point is gained for 
which he is so condescending, instead of paying for what he has 
stolen, he will be much more likely to steal more. This effort of 
his, however, is a fair confession that in his war of commerce he is 
worsted, and he can no more do without the great source of revenue 
it affords than other nations can. This may possibly clip off some 
of the profits on the goods which I have with so much difficulty and 
risk brought away from Naples; but in such precarious times noth- 
ing can be counted on with certainty, and Vv^e must take the world 
as it goes." 

The following letter affords a good example of the 
sagacious care and watchfulness with which he observed 
the signs of the times, and based his enterprises on his 
prognostications of their results. 

The goods he alludes to are the silks he brought from 
I^aples and had just despatched for America. The 
cartel Francis^ of which he subsequently speaks, was 
the vessel by which he had sent the extended manu- 
script description of the vicinities of Rome and Naples, 
from which I have heretofore given extracts : 



LETTER FROM. LISBON. 147 

''Lisbon, October 5, 1810. 

''The uncertainty of being able to procure another cargo from 
Italy, the very small quantity of Italian manufactures that can pos- 
sibly find their way to the United States in addition to those I have 
sent, the little dependence that can be placed on the revocation of 
Bonaparte's decrees, and the certainty that if they are repealed with 
conditions inimical to the commerce of Great Britain that orders of 
council will still remain in force, and consequently our commerce 
with France will continue as limited as their ability to enforce those 
orders can make it, are inducements sufficient to lead me to advise 
William to purchase largely at the sale of the silks which I have sent 
from here by the Belle Isle. I presume they will be sold at auction, 
and if the sewing-silk should go at six to six and a half dollars per 
pound, I would recommend his purchasing to the full amount of 
what would be my proportion. By sending It to the Brazils, Span- 
ish America, or even to Baltimore or Philadelphia, he could not fail 
of doing well. None has gone or can go this winter to the south- 
ward, and I know the markets of Philadelphia and Baltimore have 
been more bare of this article than that of Boston. At this place I 
believe I could have procured seven dollars per pound for the whole 
quantity together, which is a proof that it comes to them excessively 
high from England. 

" I learn by the papers that the cartel-ship Francis had arrived at 
Salem. By her you will have received a line from me, from the 
length of which you will conclude that I had abundance of leisure 
while at Naples. I hope it will afford you some amusement, and I 
know it will be gratifying to you to perceive that it served to beguile 
many a dull hour with me. 

"I hear from Henry Higginson in London that he has received 
£4800 for our share of the Florenzo's cargo, and that she was ex- 
pected there with a freight. I don't know whether this is doing well 
or not, as I have no recollection of the cost of the cargo, but I am 
satisfied it is better fortune than most of our countrymen met with 
who sailed about the same time. To be concerned in two expedi- 
tious that succeed must certainly be construed into a change of 
fortune, and almost leads me to flatter myself with seeing the time 
when I shall be free from anxiety on account of pecuniary affairs, 
and can join my dear boys in their play on the lawn, or, as evening 



148 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

approaches, listen to the sweet strains of 'Henry's Cottage Maid,' 
or 'Fair Fidelia/ as touched by the skilful hand of their dear 
mother. Alas! when are these enjoyments to be realized? Certain- 
ly not without the possession of competency. As certainly with. 

**When, therefore, the happiness of three is dependent on my 
exertions, no privation, no fatigue, no watching, no rational risks 
should deter me from pursuing that line which appears to lead most 
directly to the desired object. But how often in our efforts to ap- 
proach do we recede from it !" 

On the 8tli of November he writes : 

**The embargo is partially raised, and I am one of several who 
have had permission to depart, for some days, but I now wait for 
convoy, which will be ready in a day or two. Henry Higginson par- 
ticularly recommended my coming with a convoy, as the French 
privateers are very numerous, and insurance can be effected three 
per cent, less with convoy than without. 

*' The panic which w^as caused in Lisbon by the rapid retreat of 
the British army has long since subsided. They made a stand at the 
last lines, and the French have not dared to attack them. They 
have continued looking at each other for three weeks past, with 
scarcely any alteration in their relative positions. Scarce a day has 
passed that some miserably maimed soldiers have not been brought 
in from the army. Their appearance is indeed distressing, and 
forms a painful contrast with the fresh troops who are daily sent 
out. The order (perhaps necessary) of the British general for all the 
farmers to destroy their houses, and all the produce which they were 
unable to put out of the enemy's reach, has reduced vast numbers 
to indigence who have been well off, and, arriving at Lisbon when 
no provision had been made for them, their situation is most dis- 
tressing.'' 

His voyage to Plymouth, England, from Lisbon was 
made in company with a dozen sail of vessels under 
convoy of a frigate. 

In a long letter to my mother from tliat port, dated 
December 25th, 1810, he indulges in a scries of reflec- 



ANTIQUARIAN REFLECTIONS. 149 

tions wliich, under the circunistances, are not only in- 
trinsically interesting, but afford curious evidence of 
his peculiar characteristics. He is replying to letters 
received from here soon after his arrival : 

**I am glad to learn you received and were so well pleased with 
the long details of my rambles in Italy. . . . 

*'0f my former rambles you are in possession of no inconsider- 
able detail, but the extent of country over which my destiny has led 
me since parting from you in January last has certainly been more 
interesting than, perhaps, all the others combined. Previous to this 
my mind seems hardly to have been able to grasp or realize the idea 
of the prodigious number of years which have elapsed even since 
the construction of some of those edifices which yet bear witness 
to it, and still less to the more remote periods of history. But in 
Italy you are as irresistibly led back seventeen hundred j^ears to the 
destruction of Pompeii, or two thousand years to the days whea 
Rome was in her glory, as you are in America to the voyage of Co- 
lumbus or the landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth. 

*'This familiarity, even with objects of no greater antiquity, ap- 
pears to approximate so nearly to the Mosaic account of the time of 
the creation that you find it difficult to believe that the world can 
be so young; but when you are presented with specimens of art, 
some of which can be traced upwards of three thousand years, and 
others lost in remote antiquity, which are, nevertheless, the wonder 
and admiration of the present age, such as the Egyptian obelisks 
and pyramids, it requires a different education from mine, more im- 
plicit faith in the generally received authority, and perhaps you will 
say a more correct way of thinking, to be perfectly satisfied with it. 

''Having observed mankind in their most abject state of barbar- 
ism does not afford (even to an experienced observer) sufficient data 
to form an idea of the time necessary for them to be advanced to 
that degree of civilization which is indicated by the production of 
such labors ; but setting aside the Egyptian account of the antiquity 
of their origin (which they carry back twenty thousand years) ; the 
period appears too limited between their being in a state of bar- 
barism, even as immediately after the Mosaic account of the creation 
as possible, and their producing, when they did, such gigantic works. 



150 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

*'Tlie difference between the Hebrew and the Greek texts of 
1270 years in the period between the Creation and the birth of 
Christ does not tend to enlighten the doubtful and inquiring mind, 
and will satisfy only those who will not doubt. A singular circum- 
stance mentioned in Kecupera's history of Mount Etna has a par- 
ticular relation to this subject. He says that in digging a pit of 
great depth at Jaci (near Etna) seven distinct strata of lava were 
pierced through, the surfaces of which were parallel, and most of 
them covered with a thick bed of earth. Now the eruption which 
formed the lowest of these strata, if we may be allowed to reason 
from analogy, must have flowed from the mountain at least four- 
teen thousand years ago, for it is said to require two thousand years 
to form even a scanty soil on the surface of the lava. 

*'But of what consequence is it to us whether the world is six, 
ten, or twenty thousand years old? We have only to act well our 
parts in it, and, conscious of doing this with an easy and cheerful 
mind, leave the event to that Almighty Power who 

' * ' Though changed through all, is yet in all the same, 
Great in the earth, as in the ethereal frame, 
Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze. 
Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees. 
Lives through all life; extends through all extent; 
Spreads undivided ; operates unspent. 
To him no high, no low, no great, no small. 
He fills, he bounds, connects, and equals all. ' 

*' There is, however, something in the appearance of the vener- 
able relics of antiquity with which Italy abounds which not only 
leads to a conviction of many historical facts, but must also neces- 
sarily compel the most volatile to reflect on the vicissitude of all 
human affairs. 

"Is it not amazing, then, that we find the present rulers of the 
earth, men of liberal education, pursuing the same path as their 
predecessors? As proud, arrogant, and unjust, on obtaining an ad- 
vantage over their weaker neighbors as were their predecessors, and 
as ready to ascribe their success to their superior wisdom and tal- 
ents. The miserable end of Pompey the Great, of Caesar, of An- 
tony, and of nine tenths of the mighty heroes of Rome, in whose 



PHILOSOPHICAL REFLECTIONS. 151 

exploits the world has been as much interested and absorbed as it 
now is with those of Bonaparte, Massena, Nelson, Wellington, etc., 
must appear to the actors themselves as fabulous or distant as death 
does to a thoughtless boy— at such a prodigious distance that noth- 
ing need be apprehended from it. 

"That the Emperor of France should not be deterred from any 
act of injustice by such reflections is not surprising. His profession 
is that of a warrior. By war alone and the calamities it produces 
could he ever have reached the summit at which he has arrived, nor 
is it probable he could maintain his position but by pursuing the 
same system. But that an old-established government like that of 
Great Britain should follow such an example, a government that 
is ever boasting of its justice, humanity, etc., is indeed wonderful. 
When Themistocles declared to the assembly of Athens that he 
knew a method of giving them the sovereignty of Greece, but that 
it must be kept secret, he was desired to make it known to Aristides 
only, and abide by his decision. He accordingly told him that his 
project was to burn the whole fleet of the confederates. Aristides 
then informed the assembly that nothing could be more advanta- 
geous than the proposal of Themistocles, nor could anything be 
more unjust. Whereupon they at once abandoned the thought of 
it. But we find, in this civilized age, the pretensions to justice and 
honor of the enlightened government of England are not so well 
founded as those of the ancients, nor better than those of the great 
modern usurper, for besides the minor acts of injustice and villainy 
to which their cupidity is daily inciting them, they have shown that 
merely to obtain possession of a few old hulks of ships, and those 
belonging to a people as much in friendship with them as were the 
confederates with the people of Athens, the destruction of a flour- 
ishing city, the death of thousands, and all the long and dreadful 
train of miseries resulting from the ravages of fire and sword when 
used as the destroying engines of a merciless conqueror, have been 
no impediment. On the whole, I am induced to believe that man- 
kind are much the same at the present day that they were two thou- 
sand years ago, equally unjust, ambitious, and arrogant; perhaps 
more humane, though, recurring to the Spanish in America, the Eng- 
lish and Dutch in India, and the French during the revolution, even 
this may be doubted.'* 



152 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

To many readers of the present day these will doubt- 
less seem but commonplace reflections. Those who can 
recall the state of public feeling and the tone of current 
literature of fifty years ago — before the era of modern 
scientific investigation, and before the study of history 
had been rendered fascinating by such winters as Macau- 
lay, Prescott, and Motley — will recognize the fact that 
even then these expressions w^ould have been thought 
bold and startling. 

When we reflect that they were uttered twenty years 
earlier than that, by a man whose only early education 
liad been that of the common schools of 'New England, 
and are simply the outflow of his own thoughts in a fa- 
miliar letter to his wife, written in the midst of the per- 
plexing cares of business, they cannot be regarded as 
other than remarkable. 



CHAPTEE IX. 

1811-1816. 

Transactions in England and on the Continent. — A Project Prom- 
ising Great Results Defeated by the Failure of the Russian 
Campaign. 

The enormous difference in prices, even of articles of 
ordinary necessity, between England and the Continent, 
resulting from the forced and unnatural conditions which 
had been imposed upon them, offered favorable oppor- 
tunities to neutrals, which my father, in company with 
many other Americans, made very active efforts to im- 
prove. 

The proposed return to Naples was abandoned, and 
for the next two years he was in London and the north 
of Europe, engaged in commerce, the management of 
which often required the exercise of great skill and 
boldness, and of course involved corresponding risks. 

His letters during this period are continued at fre- 
quent intervals, but from the great uncertainty which 
attended their transmission, were always very guarded 
in their expression relative to the operations in which 
he was engaged. 

The following extract, from his first long letter after 
arriving in London, furnishes the keynote of the general 
tone which pervades them — a tone of anxiety resulting 
from the painful uncertainty attending the efforts he 
was making to attain the means of returning to tliose in 

. 7^ 



154 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

whose affection his hope of happiness was centred, yet 
of determined resolution to accomplish the object, if 
perseverance and energy could do it. 

"London, February 6, 1811. 

' '' I wrote you a very hasty scrawl by an opportunity for Boston 
on the day of my arrival here, lest a knowledge of our unprecedent- 
ed delays should have caused you anxiety. 

** It is hardly possible to conceive such a series of untoward circum- 
stances as I have met with since leaving Lisbon ; nor have my phys- 
ical sufferings been inconsiderable, as you will perceive when I tell 
you that for six weeks of this uncommonly severe winter I have 
been quarantined on board my vessel and not allowed to have a fire. 
But that is past, and I will not trouble you with a recital of my dis- 
comfort, since I escaped being sick, which might have been expected 
as a consequence of such privations, and is a convincing proof that 
my constitution is restored to its pristine strength. 

*' During my confinement at Plymouth I wrote you several very 
long letters, and we have just learned that one of the vessels (by which 
I sent a large packet) has experienced a warm proof of the love Bony 
bears to Americans, as, with her cargo, she was burned at sea by the 
InmndUe Napoleon, French privateer. 

''Among the many extraordinary things which w^e daily see tak- 
ing place in these extraordinary times Mr. Madison's proclamation 
of JSTovember 2 is certainly not the least singular. 

*' An English editor terms it 'a pretty specimen of republican sa- 
gacity,' and indeed I think it is ; for what proof has he of Bony's sin- 
cerity or good faith, that could justify such a measure? The event, 
no doubt, will show an error that will involve many in ruin. 

** As it regards myself, if the silks I sent from Italy have not been 
sold, I have no doubt they will be more valuable than ever, as there 
is no prospect of a commercial intercourse with France. The Amer- 
ican property which arrived there after November 1 has all been se- 
questered, and is held up in terrorem with a view to bring them into 
his measures. Of the property so villainously seized previous to 
that time not a farthing will ever be restored. 

' ' The prodigious loss on the exchange between Naples and this 
place, the risks attending shipments from there, together with the un- 



NEW PLANS AND PROJECTS. 155 

certainty of finding a vessel there, have induced me to give up the 
plan of another voyage there, and I am now undetermined what 
course to pursue. I would not lose a moment in returning to my 
dear wife and boys did I not consider it a duty due them to leave no 
enterprise untried that promises in any degree the accomplishment 
of their and my wishes. I shall therefore wait a few weeks to see 
what can be done, and if nothing offers shall embark for home, and 
bless my stars that you decided not to attempt to meet me at Naples 
as I proposed. 

'* Forbes* left here yesterday for France, but with no very brill- 
iant prospects. Curson has met with great difficulties and inter- 
ruptions, and the success of his voyage is doubtful. 

**In times like these there is no readier road to ruin than being 
concerned in shipping, and I am sorry that William is extending his 
interests therein. 

** You will perceive I am growing cautious, and I have no doubt 
you will perceive why: because a contrary conduct has been in a 
degree the cause of an absence from those most dear to me, for which 
no fortune can compensate." 

It is affecting to read the details he gives in the long 
series of letters following the above of the different 
plans and efforts at their execution which occupied him, 
and through the whole of which his chief source of re- 
lief aud comfort seems to have been in thus commun- 
ing with the one on whose sympathy he relied. 

An attempt to carry a cargo of wine to Copenhagen 
was attended w^ith circumstances curiously illustrative 
of the lesson which had so often been repeated in his 
experience, of a seeming misfortune proving to be a 
providential preservation. The vessel containing it had 
arrived in England from Naples, consigned to his cousin, 
Henry Higginson, who was then established in London. 

* John M. Forbes, afterwards minister to Denmark. 



156 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

The plan had previously been arranged that my father 
should immediately embark in her as passenger and take 
the wine to Copenhagen, where a very large profit would 
have been realized. The vessel was wrecked by going 
ashore on Jutland in the night, but fortunately at high 
tide, so that all the cargo was saved. This necessarily 
consumed two thirds of the profits, but they nevertheless 
realized about £1000 profit, whereas if he had kept on 
his course he would have fallen directly into the hands 
of a French privateer then lying off Elsinore. 

This business being finished, he writes from Copenha- 
gen, on the 18th of September, 1811, acknowledging let- 
ters from home containing news of losses which his brother 
had met with, which he was apprehensive would involve 
the necessity of parting with the beautiful home in Lan- 
caster to which he was so fondly attached. This was 
evidently a heavy addition to the weight of care with 
which he was already burdened, and his expressions give 
painful evidence of the suffering it caused him that my 
n:iother should be thus oppressed. 

Yet he rallies- his own spirits, and tries to encourage 
her with hopes of a brighter future. 

" Do not indulge," he says, '* in gloomy anticipations. All will yet 
be well, and in the course of twelve or eighteen months I will aston- 
ish you with a fortune that shall suffice for the gratifieatioa of th6 
wishes of all who are dear to me. Late as it now is, I am now bound 
to Russia, having chartered part of a ship, and engaged in a voyage 
which is to terminate here. I have obtained a credit of £3000 ster- 
ling, and have a fair prospect of clearing from sixty to seventy -five 
pet cent. It is possible, of course, that I may be defeated by being 
caught in the ice, by shipwreck, or by French privateers. Against 
the Banes I am guarded by a license. If I succeed I hope to be 
in London in November, from whence I contemplate a voyage to 



THE EDUCATION OF HIS CHILDREN. 157 

Naples for wine, for Lisbon, Kew Orleans, or this country, and have 
written to Paris for a license. Thus you perceive I am undertaking 
new adventures and projecting others still more extensive, before 
even this last miserable one is brought to a close. This perhaps will 
allay your fears relative to my health, for if my constitution had not 
regained its full vigor I could not have withstood the excessive fa- 
tigue and anxiety I have lately experienced, and while my health 
continues firm rest assured my spirits will never be subdued. You 
remind me of my promise that nothing within my power to control 
should induce me to prolong my absence beyond the present autumn. 
Harry will tell you that I wrote him from Plymouth that I would 
undertake no voyage which would prevent my returning to my fam- 
ily by the month of August ; but I presumed at that time that I pos- 
sessed at least $10,000, and therefore that there was no necessity of 
making a reserve for such a disappointment as I have since met 
with. But I knov/ that no apology is necessary, and that you no 
more doubt my impatience to return than I do yours to have me. 
Keep up your spirits and bear in mind that the greatest stimulant 
I possess to enable me to bear up against such accumulated misfor- 
tune as has fallen to my share is the reflection that my efforts are 
appreciated by so competent a judge as my beloved wife." 

In one of his letters at this period he makes the first 
allusion to a subject the importance of which, in his es- 
timation, is sufficiently indicated by the fact of his urg- 
ing it so strongly at a time of such doubt and anxiety 
relative to his affairs. 

My mother, it seems, was considering the propriety of 
disposing of the Lancaster estate and taking up her resi- 
dence in more economical quarters, to which lie assents 
with the assurance of his entire confidence in her judg- 
ment; but offering only the following suggestion : 

*'I will only observe that in the choice of your future residence 
a good school for the boys is an object of primary importance, and, 
in my opinion, should influence your opinion even more than a good 
physician. The man who is capable and willing to perform the im- 



158 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

portant duties of a sclioolmaster, can be expected to do it only with 
the encouragement of a handsome salary, and with a limited number 
of scholars, and if his associates were those of the first respectability 
in the town where he resides it would not escape the notice of his 
pupils, and would be properly appreciated by them. You can have 
but one objection to such a school, that of the expense, w^hich must 
not influence you, as I had rather remain an exile forever than that 
the boys should not only have a good, but a finished education. Im- 
pressed as I am with the great, the incalculable importance of a 
good education, I beg of you, in making your selection, not to be in- 
fluenced by the expense, for the man capable of taking the impor- 
tant trust of a teacher can only be expected to discharge his duty 
properly if handsomely paid, and the number of scholars limited." 

At the time the above was written his oldest son 
w^as only in his seventh year, and, of course, had hardly 
emerged from the nursery. The suggestion of the value 
to the pupils of a good social position for the master is 
full of meaning, and is eminently worthy of considera- 
tion at this day, when it is so frequently the case that 
refined social habits are not taken into account in se- 
lecting a teacher, and parents feel under no obligation 
even to make the acquaintance of those to whom they 
intrust the education of their children. 

The principal of a large public school once said to me, 
with an evident feeling of bitterness, " If I had the 
care of five hundred sheep or calves, the owners would 
show more interest in my management of them than 
the parents of these five hundred children." 

The departure for Russia w^as delayed for ten days by 
an easterly storm, and subsequently by head winds, so 
that he did not deem it prudent to go to St. Petersburg 
as he first intended, but stopped at Riga, and returned 
in one montli to CopenhageUj having added something 



JOURNAL OF A DAY. 159 

to his means, though not so largely as he would have 
done had he been able to carry out his original plan. 

He remained in Copenhagen engaged in shipments of 
wheat to England, from which, as he says in one of his 
letters, he realized an amount of profit which would have 
justified his returning to America, but meantime both 
his brothers had met with serious losses, and as they al- 
ways regarded their interests as mutual, he continued to 
avail himself of the opportunities which offered for ac- 
quiring means to aid and relieve them. 

As usual, besides sending a long letter by every op- 
portunity, he writes a very long and detailed account of 
liis experiences with descriptions, discussions, and reflec- 
tions, as if trying, in his absence from home, to supply 
by such means the domestic pleasures he so coveted. A 
single extract will suflfice to show how his time and 
mind were occupied. ^ 

'*My disrelish for the ordinary resources of most of my country- 
men — drinking and cards — and the habit to which I have long ad- 
hered of acting with entire independence in the disposal of my time, 
by not sacrificing it to others, has made it so exclusively my own 
that a knowledge of the routine of one day will give you a general 
idea of each. I rise at eight, breakfast immediately, and read or 
write till one; then walk four or five miles till half-past two, when 
I meet a party of four at the hotel to dine ; after dinner, sit and chat 
for an hour or two, take a short walk, return to my lodgings and 
take tea at seven, read till eleven, and then go to bed. My only de- 
viation from these regular habits has been when I have occasionally 
met a congenial soul who could overcome his natural indolence suf- 
ficiently to accompany me on one of my long rambles, or would 
leave the gay circle to pass a social evening with me in my room. 
And here, as elsewhere, I now and then attend the public places of 
amusement, which are tolerably good, and far better than could be 
expected for the very moderate expense. Indeed, I have visited no 



160 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAYiaATOR. 

country wliere the admission to places of public amusement was so 
cheap. At an excellent weekly concert to which I am a subscriber, 
I pay about three shillings sterling per month. In England, for a 
concert no better, the admission for a single evening is half a guinea. 
Admission to the theatre is proportionally moderate, but as I know 
nothing of thg language, I visit it only when there is a ballet, or an 
opera with good music. 

'*I have also been to a masquerade and a public ball; but partly 
owing to myself, and partly to the indifference of those with whom 
I have commercial intercourse, I have made no acquaintance with 
private society, and since my residence here have had no other din- 
ner than such as I paid for. Shaler would scarcely be able to credit 
that, in the four months I have resided here, I have not seen the in- 
side of a gentleman's house. In the few months which he and I 
spent here, in 1801, we experienced uncommon civility; in fact, we 
had never met with such hospitality. The gentlemen with whom 
we transacted our business frequently called on us, gave parties for 
us, and took pains to introduce us to the most respectable clubs and 
reading-rooms, but the times have dreadfully changed, and, alas ! 
my circumstances have dreadfully changed also. When I made my 
first visit he^ in company with my friend Shaler, it was with no 
inconsiderable eclat. 

*' Two young men who were passengers and freighters of a noble 
ship of one thousand tons from the East Indies, with a capital of 
seven thousand bags of coffee, accompanied by three black servants, 
and taking the best lodgings in the city, attracted the notice of the 
natives, and led us foolishly to fancy that the attentions we received 
were due to our personal merit, unmixed with considerations of the 
property we represented. Knowing, as you do, the extent of my 
misfortunes, you will not imagine that I have waited till this time 
to be cured of such vanity, or that the difference of my reception 
now and at that time has had the least effect upon my spirits. On 
the contrary, having no disposition to mix much with the world, it 
has afforded me matter of amusement and speculation. A commer- 
cial house may expect to derive advantage from the civilities and at^ 
tention which they pay the rich man, and the latter will almost in- 
variably attribute such attentions to his superior merit; but what 
can induce the generality of mankind to bow so meanly at the shrine 



PHILOSOPHICAL REFLECTIONS. 161 

of riches, even if the possessor is a villain or a fool, I cannot con- 
ceive; yet that it is so all the world over I am perfectly satisfied. 
If the rich were usually generous in proportion to their riches it 
would be accounted for, but the contrary is almost invariably the 
case. Eiches then must possess an inherent, inexpressible some- 
thing which dazzles and attracts the mob without benefiting them, 
and the poet says ' 

'' ' Gold too oft, with magic art, 
Subdues each nobler impulse of the heart. 
This crowns the prosperous villain with applause 
To whom in vain sad Merit pleads her cause. 
This strews with roses life's perplexing road, 
And leads the way to Pleasure's blest abode. 
With slaughtered victims fills the weeping plain, 
And smooths the furrows of the treacherous main.' 

"With such sentiments — with a perfect conviction of the insuffi- 
ciency of riches to procure happiness, and with wants far more 
limited than those of the generality of mankind — the sacrifices I have 
made may appear, to an indifferent observer, extraordinary and in- 
consistent, but those who know me will not attribute them to a 
criminal thirst of gain, or a weak ambition to be considered rich. 

" The greater sacrifices I am now making, in thus becoming a vol- 
untary exile from all that makes life desirable, being the effect of 
dire necessity, needs nothing said in extenuation. Exile and want 
of wealth are relative evils; thirst, hunger, and nakedness, positive; 
and while we evince a proper resignation to the former, we will 
bless our stars if in times so pregnant with calamities we are per- 
mitted to escape the latter." 

Copenhagen continued to be his headquarters during 
the succeeding year of 1812, and in the summer of that 
year news was received of the declaration of war be- 
tween the United States and Great Britain. 

A final effort to retrieve his fortunes was defeated 
after all apparent obstacles had been overcome, by an 
event which marked an era in the history of Europe, in 



162 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

which the ruin of individual fortunes was of as little 
moment as the destruction of a straw in the vortex of 
Niagara. 

By the aid of influential men in office, and after great 
difiiculty and delay, he succeeded in obtaining from 
Paris a license for the introduction of a cargo from 
Copenhagen into Hamburg via Kiel. The next step 
was comparatively easy — to obtain from the Danish 
government a license to introduce a cargo from Eng- 
land into Copenhagen. Severe restrictions were in both 
cases exacted as to the character of the articles compos- 
ing the cargo, but these were complied with, the ad- 
venture arrived safely at Copenhagen in June, and could 
have been sold at once for a very large profit, but the 
prospect at Hamburgh was so much greater as to jus- 
tify a disregard of the old maxim of " the bird in the 
hand." 

While engaged in the transshipment of the cargo into 
Danish coasters, to be taken to Kiel, some malicious or 
envious person made complaint to the government that 
a gentleman who w^as associated with him in the busi- 
ness was an English subject, and that the property he 
represented was English. This led to a seizure and a 
legal investigation, the result of which was the restora- 
tion of the property, with acknowledgment that it had 
been unjustifiably detained. The law's delay, however, 
had protracted the detention to such a late date, and the 
winter set in with such severity at a much earlier date 
than usual, that before the coasters could be despatched 
they were fast in the ice and so remained for the winter. 

Tlie being forced to wait in idleness till spring was, of 



RETURN TO THE UNITED STATES. 163 

course, a disappointmeDt, but there existed no cause to 
apprehend any depreciation of the value of the property, 
for up to that time the possibility of failure of any of 
the great projects of Napoleon was not taken into ac- 
count as a factor in a commercial enterprise. But even 
liis power was unavailing against the elements. The 
destruction of his army in the Russian campaign of that 
terrible winter was the death-blow of the Continental 
system. The spring of 1813 opened with the emanci- 
pation of Europe from the tyranny which had so long 
oppressed it; the ordinary cliannels of commerce were 
opened ; the markets were flooded ; prices became nom- 
inal, and it was only after long delay and at considerable 
sacrifice that the business was closed, and my father pre- 
pared to return to the United States, as there no longer 
existed an object for remaining abroad. 

OfBcial announcement had been made that Americans 
landing in England from the Continent would be de- 
tained as prisoners of war. He therefore proceeded via 
Brussels and Paris to Bordeaux, and embarked for New 
York, where he landed on the 1st of January, 1814, and 
as he says in his narrative — 

** It will have been seen that in the four years which had elapsed 
since my departure from Boston in the schooner Maria for Naples 
no efforts had been spared, no deficiency of perseverance evinced, 
and no opportunity allowed to pass unembraced which presented 
the prospect of bettering my fortune. 

" I was once again landed on my native shore in good health and 
with an empty purse, but buoyed above the immediate pressure of 
disappointment by the pleasing anticipation of at least a short re- 
pose in the bosom of my family." 

No opportunity was offered for renewing his ocean 



164 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

labor till after the treaty of Ghent and the declaration 
of peace, except that of privateering, in which it is very 
evident from his letters that he was desirous to engage, 
and doubtless refrained in deference to my mother's 
wishes. 

In July, 1815, he sailed from Salem in the employ of 
some of his friends there in the ship Exeter^ for Teneriffe 
and Batavia. This voyage occupied nearly a year, and 
was not devoid of interesting incident, of which he gives 
an account in his narrative, but of w^iich I shall here no- 
tice only certain references in his letters to matters hav- 
ing no connection with the direct object of the voyage. 

Arriving at Teneriffe on the 26th of August, he was 
subjected to a quarantine of eight days in an open road- 
stead, where he anchored in fifty-five fathoms, and the 
rolling of the ship was w^orse than when at sea under 
sail. 

By the English papers sent ofi to him by his consignee 
he here received the first intelligence of the battle of 
Waterloo, of which he says, in a letter to my mother of 
August 28th : 

* * The Englisli papers sent me by Mr. Little afforded such an over- 
whelming flood of astonishing and extraordinary news as almost 
bewildered me, and required the recalling to my mind the great 
events that had astonished the world for two years past to persuade, 
myself that I was not dreaming. The great emperor and king — he 
who has shaken Europe to its foundations, and made almost every 
sovereign in it bend the knee to him, is reduced, in the short space 
of three years, from this trem^endous, and to short-sighted mortals 
secure elevation, to the dreadfully humiliating degradation of flying 
for life and surrendering himself to the captain of a British ship of 
war ! What wonderful vicissitudes has not this man witnessed ! Is 
it not astonishing that he should not have preferred death ? 



A CLASSICAL SCHOOL AT LANCASTER. 165 

*'Tliat mankind continue to sympathize in his fall is, I think, 
evinced by the generosity which they display in making a proper 
provision for him in so very salubrious a climate as that of St. 
Helena. Here I should doubt if even with the assistance of his 
friend, the D — 1, he would ever have it in his power to disturb the 
world again. It is not improbable that on my return I may call and 
see him." 

His next letter, written at sea, January 16, 1816, con- 
tains the first allusion to a gentleman wliose acquaint- 
ance he had made during the preceding year while at 
lionie in Lancaster, and whose warm friendship he re- 
tained till the end of his life. 

I have heretofore given an extract from one of his 
letters expressing his wish that his sons should have the 
best possible advantages of education. This had been a 
prominent object in his mind during the time he was at 
home, and in order to secure it he had proposed the es- 
tablishment in Lancaster of a school of a superior order 
to those which were then common in the countrj'-, and 
offered to defray w^iatever additional expense might be 
necessary to secure the services of a classical teacher. 
In return for this the town authorized him to select the 
teacher, and he at once applied to President Kirkland, 
of Harvard College, who w^as his personal friend, and 
through his aid secured the services of Jared Sparks, 
then a young man just starting in a career which is now 
recorded in the pages of literary history. I shall have 
more to say on this subject when speaking of my fa- 
ther's life in Lancaster. I have mentioned it here only 
in explanation of the following paragraph, which con- 
tains further evidence of the importance he attached to 
the subject of education, and his determination that no 



166 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOK. 

effort on his part should be wanting to provide for his 
sons the best means that the country afforded : 

" I am not without apprehension that Mr, Sparks may not be will- 
ing to remain longer than the first year, especially for a salary which 
he seemed to feel some reluctance in accepting. Whatever part of 
this salary I may have to pay (and this depends on the number of 
scholars) I had much rather pay it, and even add a hundred dollars 
to the annual amount of it, than that he should leave. The perni- 
cious eifects to the pupils of a frequent change of masters I am so 
well aware of that I should be willing to make considerable sacrifices 
to avoid it. The advantages to the boys of being educated at home, 
compared with that of sending them away at so tender an age, is so 
obvious and striking that I would make great efforts and sacrifices 
of my own convenience to secure it. I hope, therefore, that means 
will be found to induce Mr. Sparks to remain at least three years. I 
feel so much the importance of laying a good foundation for educa- 
tion, and that the means of enabling my boys to do it is as dependent 
on me as the superstructure will afterwards be on themselves, that I 
am not less anxious to accomplish the one than to impress on their 
minds a conviction of the truth of the other.'* 

The YojRgQ to Batavia and back was completed in 
August, I8I65 and he then remained at home for nearly 
a year, at the end of which time, being then in his forty- 
fourth year, he entered upon what may, in some respects, 
be considered as his most remarkable voyage; not in- 
deed on account of the dangers of the seas, but of the 
unjust and outrageous treatment to which he was sub- 
jected at the hands of his fellow-men, and the courage, 
skill, and adroit management with which he finally ex- 
tricated himself and achieved a triumphant success. 



CHAPTER X. 

1817. 

Sails in the Ship Beaver from I^eW York fof the West Coast of 
South America. — Seized at Talcahuana. — Plots to Take the Span- 
ish Frigate Venganza. — Seized with Fever. — Is Sent to Lima in 
the Brig Canton. 

i^o opportunity oflFered for the prosecution of any 
such enterprising voyages as seemed especially attrac- 
tive to my father till 1817, when the news was received 
of a revolution in Chili and that the people had eman- 
cipated themselves from the government of Spain. 

This event, by freeing the commerce of that country 
from the paralyzing restrictions to whicli it had hitherto 
been subjected, seemed to offer flattering prospects to 
those merchants who should be first to avail themselves 
of the opportunity. 

My father's knowledge of the wants and resources 
of the country gave him advantages which few of his 
countrymen then possessed for undertaking a voyage 
thither.. This knowledge he at once proceeded to turn 
to account by submitting a plan of a voyage to John 
Jacob Astor, whose sagacious mind was not slow to per- 
ceive the very great advantages it offered, though he 
fully appreciated the attendant risks. 

His favorite ship, the Beaver (the same mentioned in 
Irving's "Astoria"), had just been repaired at an ex- 



168 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

pense nearly equal to that of building her anew, and 
was then in fine condition for such a voyage as was pro- 
posed. The cargo, consisting principally of European 
manufactures to the amount of |14:0,000, and the ship 
and stores, valued at $50,000 more, formed an aggregate 
such as no other individual in the United States would 
(or, perhaps, at that time could) have risked on such a 
voyage. 

Mr. Aster's wisdom and liberality in leaving the whole 
management to my father's discretion was the best evi- 
dence of the confidence reposed in him, and tlie only 
exception in which my father's wishes were overruled 
was a chief cause of the subsequent misfortunes which 
befell them. This was tlie shipment of a large quantity 
of arms and ammunition, which my father considered 
would excite suspicion, and, perhaps, be made the pre- 
text for confiscation. 

A single paragraph of my father's narrative betrays, 
in a few simple words, the depth of feeling he experi- 
enced and the crowd of reflections which pressed upon 
him at starting upon this new adventure, so full of 
causes, both of hope and apprehension, for the future ; 
calling up such reminiscences of the past, such tender 
thought of all he was leaving, and such anxious fears of 
the possibilities involved in the years of separation 
which must necessarily ensue. My mother had accom- 
panied him to JS'ew York and remained with him till 
his departure, having me, then in my third year, in her 
compan3^ He took leave of her, and sailed on July 1, 
1817, on a fine day, with a fresh westerly breeze. 

** Before the day closed a trial with other vessels bound to the east- 



VOYAGE OF THE "BEAVER." 169 

ward satisfied me that the ship sailed well and steered easily. The 
watch being set, as usual, at eight o'clock, and the course given to be 
steered during the night, I paced the deck till midnight, pleased with 
the quiet which had so suddenly succeeded the bustle of getting 
away, and gave to the mind ample scope to dwell on scenes past, 
present, and to come. 

** There are few who have not experienced the pain of bidding 
farewell to beloved relatives, even though the time of separation is 
limited to a few weeks, and thence may be able to form some idea 
of their feeling of desolateness and homesickness whose destiny 
compels them to part for years, perhaps forever. Nor could the 
flattering confidence manifested by my employers — in the superb ship 
under my command, the valuable cargo consigned to me, the entire 
and unrestricted control of both, and the reasonable prospect of a 
happy result — tend to diminish the sadness which a recurrence to home 
always produced. Time, however, and the imperious duties of my 
station, gradually lessened the poignancy of these feelings, and hope 
—ever -buoyant hope— cheered the drooping spirits, by pointing to a 
period, however distant, of a happy consummation of my wishes." 

The voyage was unmarked by any event of special 
interest In the hope of getting some inteHigence of 
the state of affairs in Chili wliich might be of service to 
liim, he endeavored to touch on the coast of Brazil, and 
arrived off Maldonado on the 8th of September; but the 
weather was very thick and stormy, and seeing no pros- 
pect of clearing up, after laying to for several hours, 
he abandoned the attempt and proceeded on his course. 

He next attempted to reach the Falkland Islands, in 
order to replenish his wood and water, so as to avoid the 
actual necessity of putting into a Chilian port if he found 
it advisable to avoid doing so. Before arriving in their 
latitude, however, a succession of violent gales carried 
them so far to the eastward that the time required to 
reach them would have been unprofitably spent, and he 
8 



170 VOYAGES OF A MEKCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

accordingly held bis course for Cape Horn, which he 
passed at 9 a.m. on the 27th of September, with a smooth 
sea and a favorable breeze, to which all the light sails 
were set. 

On the 15tli of October, 1817, he arrived at the Island 
of Mocha, and, in the hope of getting information of 
the political situation in Chili, lay off and on for several 
hours and sent a boat ashore, which returned after hav- 
ing found no trace of inhabitants and no animals except 
wild horses. 

As a supply of wood and water was now a matter of 
necessity, he determined to stop at Talcaliuana, presum- 
ing that as the right to enter any port for such supplies 
was guaranteed by treaty, he would have no cause to 
appreliend ill-treatment, whichever party might be in 
possession. Under these impressions he arrived next 
morning oflf the port, and while laying becalmed was 
boarded by an officer, who told him that the patriots 
had possession of the place, that he was a patriot 
ofhcer, that the royal flag w^as kept flying on the two 
ships of war as a deco}^, that tlie American brig Can- 
ton was in port and was to sail for Salem in two or 
three days, etc., all of wliich was false except that the 
American brig was the Canton, 

The calm continuing, lie was forced to let go an anch- 
or, and soon after his vessel was boarded by another and 
apparently a superior officer, who wore the royal uniform, 
and demanded the ship's papers. He conflrraed the 
statements of the previous visitor, but suspicion was 
awakened as to their truth, and, if false, the motive must 
forebode mischief. It was necessary to decide at once 



ARRIVAL AT TALCAHUAXA. I7l 

what course to adopt. The dead calm which prevailed 
rendered flight impossible, and, if a breeze came, the at- 
tempt to escape w^ould be a sufficient cause for pursuit 
and capture by the frigate lying in plain sight, and which 
might rationally be supposed to be the faster sailer. 
While the calm continued, the only mode by which he 
could be attacked would be by boats, which he might 
beat off; but the attempt to do so, like the effort to 
escape, would, in ease of failure, serve as a justifiable plea 
for confiscation. It was, moreover, obvious that if these 
ships of war w^ere part of the royal navy, the royalists 
must still possess the ascendency at sea, and consequent- 
ly that the port of Valparaiso would be blockaded, so that 
the attempt to enter there after having forced his way 
from here, with a royal ofliicer on board to tell the story, 
would result in certain disaster. On the other hand, 
however vexatious and annoying the conduct of the 
government might be, from the feeling of resentment 
excited by the suspicion that he intended to traflSc with 
their enemies, it ought not to provoke him to acts which 
would endanger the property, especially as there v^ras the 
most undeniable evidence of such necessity as had been 
expressly provided for by treaty. The least of two evils, 
therefore, seemed to be to place himself in their power 
with the confidence of right inspired by honest intentions. 

Accordingly, when a breeze came next morning, he 
entered the port and came to anchor between the two 
ships of war. A guard was immediately placed on board, 
and no one was allowed to leave the ship. 

The following letter gives an account of what fol- 
lowed : 



172 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

"On Board the 'Beayer': Talcahxjana, November 22, 1817, 

'* Adversity continues to assail me with the most unrelenting se« 
verity. You may remember the aversion I had that any part of my 
cargo should be composed of arms and ammunition. You will not 
doubt that, having them, I took all the precautions in my power that 
the case required, but these were of no avail, and I have been led on 
by my untoward destiny till I have fallen into the hands of a set 
of unprincipled beings who, with some of the forms of law and a 
mockery of justice, are proceeding to the condemnation of my val- 
uable ship and cargo, and to the consequent consummation of my 
ruin. . , . 

** As our wood and water were completely exhausted, I determined 
to enter the first port I could in Chili, presuming that, let it be in 
possession of either party, they could not fail to allow us to supply 
our wants and depart peaceably. But in these reasonable expecta- 
tions I have been sadly disappointed. There was not a port on the 
whole coast of Chili or Peru where my arrival would have excited 
such suspicion as here, nor one where the temptation offered by so 
rich a ship was so unlikely to be withstood. This port was on the east- 
ern side, in possession of the republicans ; on the w^estern (which is 
a peninsula), by the royalists, who, having a frigate and a sloop-of-war 
here, possessed the uncontrolled dominion of the waters. The roy- 
alists, besieged or confined to a little point of land where they had 
consumed all their provisions, were dependent on the precarious 
supply which their command of the waters enabled them to pro- 
cure clandestinely from the republican shore. 

'* After being so long at sea to arrive at a port where no refresh- 
ments could be procured was of itself sufficiently unfortunate, but 
this is one of the least of the evils I have suffered. 

' ' The general-in-chief , believing that my design was to supply his 
enemies, and particularly that my arms and ammunition were in- 
tended for this purpose, has treated me with a degree of rigor cor- 
respondent to this belief. Upon arrival in port my ship was imme- 
diately filled with an armed banditti, so ragged, so full of vermin, so 
tliievish and so uncontrollable that a residence in a den of abandoned 
robbers could not have been more uncomfortable. These, after re- 
maining forty-eight hours and stealing everything that came in their 
way, were relieved by a captain and his company from the garrison, 



THE SHIP SEIZED. 173 

who have behaved with more propriety, and who now continue on 
duty on board. 

"To add to the safety of these troops, not less than the security 
of the ship, the sails were unbent and taken away, and twenty of my 
men were distributed into other ships, myself and officers confined 
to the ship, and not allowed to speak with any of our countrymen 
belonging to the Canton. This vessel, belonging to Mr. Peabody, 
of Salem, had been here two months, and but for the specie she 
had on board the place w^ould undoubtedly have been surrendered 
to the republicans, as the troops were on the eve of revolt for their 
pay, and the appropriation of this money was all that prevented it. 
I will not attempt to describe to you the anguish of my mind for 
the first few days after the discovery of the efforts that my captors 
were making to form some plea to justify a robbery already decided 
on. This was so evident that, combined with the privations and 
multiplied aggravations to which I was compelled to submit, exist- 
tence became so insupportable that I had determined to blow up the 
ship, and waited only for an opportunity, when, like Sampson, my 
exit should be accompanied by that of my enemies. 

*' While waiting for this a ray of hope presented itself, which, 
brightening by reflection, presented to my mind a plausible plan of 
causing to recoil on my enemies that ruin which they were prepar- 
ing for me; but to execute this with success a combination of favor- 
able circumstances w^as required, for which I am now anxiously 
waiting. Its failure is certain death; but as this is the only chance 
of saving the property, I am determined on putting it in execution. 
Having come to this decision I write this to leave with Mr. Coffin 
for you, but from the very great uncertainty of its ever reaching you 
it is unadvisable to sa}'^ all I wish. 

*'If I fail in attaining my object, the world will pronounce the 
attempt rash and foolhardy. If I succeed, my conduct will be as 
decidedly condemned by one portion of my fellow-men as it will be 
approved by the other; but the opinion of the world is to me a mat- 
ter of indifference. You will find excuses for me — though you can 
have no conception of the passion which stimulates me to deeds of 
desperation — not less in the unbounded love I bear you and the dear 
children (a protracted separation from whom I cannot reconcile to 
my mind), than in the repeated and accumulated misfortunes by 
which I have been assailed. 



174 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

"If it is destined tliat I should never again have the delight of 
meeting you, which God avert, my greatest solicitude is on account 
of the want of means to give them such an education as I have 
always designed." 

He then calmly gives her a full statement of the re- 
sources which will be left to her, with advice as to the 
best means of turning them to account, and concludes 
as follows : 

"My resolution is fixed, and my fate will be decided in a few 
days. That the Great Omnipotent Ruler of the Universe may avert 
the danger that hangs over me, and restore me once again to my 
beloved wife, children, and friends, is the ardent prayer of your most 
affectionate, devoted, and, perhaps from this act, undeserving hus- 
band." 

In a letter to Mr. Astor, of tlie same date as the above 
(of wliich I have a copy in his letter-book), he alhides 
in a very guarded manner to the above project, and 
gives directions in regard to provision for his family in 
case of accident to himself. I quote from his published 
narrative the account he gives of the project : 

** The prospect of dragging on for an indefinite period the wretch- 
ed existence I had endured since arriving at this port was insupport- 
able. Mortified at the humiliating position in which I was placed; 
goaded by the long train of evils which would inevitably result to 
me from the loss of this property, and driven to desperation by my 
inability to perceive any prospect of a termination to such misery, I 
viewed destruction in an effort to free myself as an evil of less mag- 
nitude, and therefore determined, if I could induce my men to join 
me, to put in execution a plan which I had long meditated, and 
which, like all revolutionary movements, w^ould be deemed praise- 
worthy or lawless as the result should prove successful or otherwise. 

* ' While laying between the Spanish vessels of war, where our ship 
was first anchored, I had a good opportunity of noticing the absence 
of proper and ordinary discipline. During more than a month I 



PLAN FOR EECOVERY OF THE SHIP. 175 

paced the Beaver's deck every night — often till the middle watch 
had nearly worn away — and observed that more than half the time 
the sentries were so deficient in vigilance as to be hailed several 
times before answering. Perceiving the advantage that might result 
if I could substitute my answer for that of the sentry on board our 
ship, I often took the trumpet and found my ' Alerto ' to be as cur- 
rent as that of the Spanish sentry. 

'* I noticed also that a great number of men were sent away in the 
launches every night to guard some weak points at the eastern ex- 
tremity of the town. With a view of ascertaining the feasibility of 
rendering nugatory our guard of twenty soldiers, I tried the experi- 
ment of giving them a can of grog mixed with a little laudanum, 
which put them all into so profound a sleep for several hours as to 
give us entire control of the ship — a circumstance which was con- 
cealed from their superiors by my ' Alerto ' passing for that of the 
proper sentry. 

*' With these preliminary experiences and my general knowledge 
of the slovenly manner in which the duties of officers and men were 
performed on board Spanish ships of war, it appeared to me that if 
a favorable opportunity presented, and my men were resolute, we 
might take the commodore's ship by a coup-de-main, 

**It must be obvious that the carrying-out successfully the plan I 
had formed must depend upon obtaining possession of the fastest 
sailing ship, which I had ascertained to be the Venganza. Once in 
possession of this ship, it would not require more than two or three 
hours before we should have brought her to anchor in the bay of St. 
Vincent's, which is only about two miles to windward of Talca- 
huana. About a mile east of this bay the patriot army was en- 
camped, the commander of which could not fail to perceive the 
advantage which fortune had thus thrown in his way, and would 
lose no time in furnishing the number of men requisite for the per- 
formance of the various duties on board. These could be embarked, 
and a return to Talcahuana effected in twelve hours from the time 
of having left there, though it is probable a few additional hours 
might be required to adjust the mode of proceeding. 

"A vigorous and simultaneous attack by this frigate on one side 
and by the patriot arm}^ on the other would cause the surrender of 
the town and shipping in a very short time. I should then have 



176 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

gained possession of the Beaver with the principal part of her cargo 
yet on board. But this constituted only a small part of my plan. 
The main object, then, was to revolutionize the kingdom of Peru; 
and to effect this purpose the way seemed to be clear, and not very 
difficult if I could induce the Chilian general to furnish me with the 
requisite number of men, which, as they were no longer wanted at 
Talcahuana, it was presumable he would do. 

** With the Venganza thus manned, and before the possibility of 
any account of these transactions reaching the blockading squadron 
off Valparaiso, I would proceed thither with Spanish colors flying, 
sheer alongside the commodore's ship, the Esmeralda, before those 
on board had any suspicion of danger, and take her, probably with- 
out losing a man. The smaller vessels composing the blockading 
force would then surrender without resistance. 

** When I had thus been the means of placing in the power of the 
Chilian government the whole naval force of Peru, my personal ser- 
vices would be no longer necessary. 

"Thus amid the pressure of misfortune were my spirits buoyed 
up with the prospect of a change in my affairs, possibly a brilliant 
one, conducting to fame, fortune, the chastisement of my perse- 
cutors, and, more gratifying than all, to the restoration to my em- 
ployers of their property, with abundant advantage. 

**The desperate measure, the execution of which now occupied 
my sleeping as well as waking hours, in which the lives of myself 
and associates, as well as those of innocent Spanish seamen, would 
be jeopardized or sacrificed, I was aware would be viewed by some 
as high-handed, lawless, and piratical ; by others as a just retaliation 
for the injuries I had suffered ; and by a greater number as favoring 
the efforts of an oppressed people for the overthrow of a despotic 
government, and the establishment of a liberal one in its stead, and, 
therefore, highly commendable. 

''But to perceive or feel the full force of the motives by which I 
was actuated, it is proper to refer to some scenes in my narrative al- 
ready detailed, such as the fruit of many years of my hard earnings 
being swept off, and myself and family reduced to poverty, by the 
robbery of Admiral Cochrane, sanctioned by a wicked judge of vice- 
admiralty without a justifiable cause and in violation of the law of 



PREPARATIONS FOR ACTION. 177 

nations; next, the treacherous, mean, and cowardly manner in which, 
by order of Napoleon, my vessel and cargo were stolen from me by 
Murat; and now without having violated any law, or deviated in 
any degree from the tenor of the existing treaty, being again stripped 
of my property, reduced to penury, and goaded with the prospect 
of the long train of evils which were inevitable. Let such repeated 
and deeply distressing wTongs be brought home to the breast of any 
one, and if they be not considered sufficient to justify the measure 
on which I had determined, they will do much towards extenuat- 
ing it." 

Having very cautiously communicated the subject of 
his thoughts to two of the most trustworthy of his men, 
and encouraged them by citing instances in which a few 
determined men had overcome a greatly superior num- 
ber simply by taking them by surprise, he found them 
ready and willing to sustain him if he w^ould take the 
lead. He then told them to sound their companions as 
opportunity offered, impressing upon them the necessity 
of great caution. The i-esult was as he had anticipated. 
The men were all greatly exasperated by the treatment 
they had received, and the loss of their wages, and were 
ready and earnest to engage in any sclieme which of- 
fered a chance of emancipation. It only remained, 
therefore, to make the proper arrangements and deter- 
mine upon the time to strike the blovv\ 

The mates of the brig Canton were both kept on 
board the frigate, and it was, of course, a matter of im- 
portance that they should be enlisted in tlie enterprise. 
For this purpose my father made a visit to the commo- 
dore, with whom he had become familiarly acquainted, 
and, after conversing with him for some time, took his 
leave, and then stopped to have a cliat with his country- 
8^ 



178 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

men on the deck. 'No one else ^vas present but thd two 
sentries, neither of whom understood a word of English. 
They had already heard from some of the men a rumor 
of what was going on, and admitted the feasibility of 
the scheme if the men could be depended on, and readi- 
ly agreed to take part in it. 

It had been observed that on Sundays, in addition to 
the men sent ofiE on duty, others were allow^ed to go 
ashore for amusement, and on Sunday afternoon most 
of the oflScers also were seeking recreation away from 
the ship. It w^as agreed, therefore, that Sunday after- 
noon should be the time of attack. On Saturday after- 
noon they met by agreement in a secluded place and 
found they numbered fifteen, besides the two on board 
the frigate. After designating the men to go in the 
different boats, and giving directions as to the kind of 
arms to be carried and how^ they could best be concealed, 
my father gave them their final directions as minutely 
as possible. Those in the Cantoris boat were ordered 
to be sailing about near the frigate, and when they saw 
the Beaver^s boat go to the starboard side of the ship, 
they were to go alongside on the larboard. The boats' 
crews, mounting simultaneously on opposite sides of the 
ship, were instantly to clear the deck of the Spaniards; 
and at the same time those who w^ere designated for the 
purpose were to cast loose the fore-topsail and cut the 
cable. The wind at that season w^as so invariably from 
the south, and blowing so fresh, that the possibility of 
its failing them w^as not even thought of, though it was 
obvious that it was absolutely essential to their suc- 
cess. 



THE WIND FAILS TO COME. 179 

Before parting my father addressed them a few words 
of encouragement, based upon a full knowledge which 
he presumed they possessed of the hazardous nature of 
the undertaking. He bade them remember that, once 
embarked in it, there could be no retreat ; that victory 
or death was the only alternative; that although the 
chances of a glorious result and escape from the misery 
they were suffering were very favorable if they were 
true to each other, and behaved with spirit and determi- 
nation, yet the least flinching by any one at the critical 
moment might be the ruin of all. If, therefore, any 
one of them felt unequal to facing the danger, he wished 
him to avow it and withdraw while there was yet time. 
All being resolute, they dispersed and returned to the 
ship in different parties. 

Early Sunday forenoon my father made a call, upon 
the commodore, and, after spending half an hour w^ith 
him, and promising to return in the afternoon with a 
book he w^ished to borrow, he spent some time on deck 
with the two mates, and satisfied himself by the obser- 
vations he made that if his men were true he need have 
little anxiety for the result. 

But when he left the frigate, after eleven o'clock, the 
south wind had not yet begun to blow. A dead calm 
prevailed. This w\as very unusual, and, of course, ex- 
cited great anxiety. Hour after hour passed by but no 
breeze came. But it might spring up suddenly before 
dark, and in that hope the soothing draught was admin- 
istered to the soldiers on board the Beaver^ which soon 
had its effect, and left the crew at liberty to arm them- 
selves and make all their preparations at leisure. It was 



180 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

in vain. Day sank into night without a breath from the 
south, and another week of suspense awaited them. 

Moral as w^ell as phj-sical causes had doubtless been 
operating to produce disease, which for some days had 
been making its approach. On the day after the in- 
tended attack upon the frigate my father was delirious 
with fever, and on his recovery wrote to my mother as 
follows : 

*'Wheii on the point of putting my plan into execution I was 
suddenly and severely seized with typhus fever, which came near 
terminating my existence. For nearly a week I was unconscious 
of all passing occurrences, and w^hen I recovered the opportunity 
was gone, and no alternative was left me but submission to my fate. 
During my illness my ship and cargo were condemned, and I am 
now waiting the establishment of the court of appeal at St. Jago. 
But before this can take place they have got to perform the task of 
conquering the country. 

**F6r this purpose about five thousand men marched from here a 
fortnight since, with a confidence of success founded on their con- 
tempt for the enemy, and which may prove their ruin, as the pa- 
triots possess double their number, and are ready to meet them. If 
the latter are successful they will soon be here again, when we shall, 
in consequence, be sent to Lima, where the business will soon be 
settled. Not less prompt will be its termination if the royalists are 
decidedly successful, but what we have most to dread is a protracted 
warfare, as in this case the only apparent limit to our detention is 
the expenditure of the proceeds of the ship and cargo. They have 
already issued a decree for taking out of the ship goods to the amount 
of $100,000. Their necessities have compelled them to take this 
property, and I am much more apprehensive that they will not pos- 
sess the ability to return it, than of the decision of the court of ap- 
peal. As there is no legitimate cause for the condemnation of the 
property, there is no doubt it must eventually be restored; but my 
brilliant prospects are ruined, and instead of indulging the pleasing 
idea of passing the evening of life in ease and quiet, I am trying to 
reconcile myself to continued toil and privation, and to bless my 



DEFECT OF THE ROYAL ARMY. 181 

stars if, by such exertions and sacrifices, I am able to defray tiie ex- 
pense of educating my boys. 

''March 30. — The army which marched from here two months 
ago is said to have gained a brilliant victory over the patriot forces 
of double their number, and the belief in the truth of this report is 
so general that they are in daily expectation of hearing of the capt- 
ure of the capital, St. Jago. There are so many letters to this effect 
that I could not fail to give credit to them if experience had not 
taught me their habitual disregard of truth. Hence I have doubts 
and fears which time only can remove. 

''May 6. — When I wrote you last the royal troops w^ere said to 
have gained a great and decisive victory, and it was supposed that 
there w^ould be no obstacle to their entering the capital. 

'* All the members of the civil department of the government were 
preparing to set off for St. Jago, and I intended to accompany or 
soon follow them for the purpose of prosecuting the appeal in the 
tribunal that would be immediately established there, in which I had 
the most flattering expectations of a restoration of the property. 

** While all were on the tiptoe of expectation of hearing of the en- 
try of the royal army into the capital and the consequent subjuga- 
tion of the country, who should make his appearance but the com- 
mander-in-chief, General Ossorio, weighing at least one third less 
than when he set out, worn down with fatigue and fear, and accom- 
panied by half a dozen meagre soldiers — alrnost the only remnant of 
the once formidable royal army. They were completely defeated 
on the 5th ultimo near St. Jago, and the second in command. Gen- 
eral Ordonez, the man who had been the cause of my ruin, was made 
prisoner. The scene that immediately succeeded the arrival of the 
general was one of dismay and confusion. Horses, mules, carts, 
wagons, and everything of the kind were put in requisition to trans- 
port goods from Concepcion to this place. The road for two days 
was crowded, and those who could not procure conveyances were 
travelling on foot, some of the women carrying infants, others their 
poultry, and driving the family hog; and such a universal panic 
seized them that if only five hundred of the patriots had appeared 
this place w^ould have made no opposition. Talcahuana became im- 
mediately even more crowded than during the siege ; every shed and 
outhouse, however miserable, was filled. The ships were prepared 



i82 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

for taking off the families and garrison, and everybody was occupied 
in-getting their effects on board. After a week had passed, and no 
enemy appeared, they began to recover their senses, and even to 
think they might defend the place. 

*' The prospect of a speedy termination of ray business was anni- 
hilated by this defeat. It was asserted that the Americans were 
friendly to the patriots, and that letters had been found from Cap- 
tain Biddle, of the United States ship Ontario, to the patriot chief, 
expressing sympathy with their cause, so that we were looked upon 
as enemies. We are now, therefore, in a most irksome state of sus- 
pense. 

''While one party is desirous of defending the place, in the be- 
lief that its possession is important to the reconquest of the country, 
the other is desirous of losing no time in embarking themselves and 
their effects for Lima, and this from the well-founded reason of the 
total inability of the royal party to raise a force suflScient to offer 
even a chance of subjugating the country. If the first plan pre- 
vails, it is impossible to conjecture when I shall be able to leave 
here. If the second, and we proceed to Lima, a decision will soon 
take place ; and if my property is restored I shall probably proceed 
to China, or perhaps direct to America. If not I shall take the 
first ship that sails either for Spain or the United States. You 
perceive, therefore, that I am entirely at a loss to know when or 
where I am bound. 

*' The idea of being obliged to absent myself again and again from 
my beloved family is productive of gloomy feelings in spite of every 
effort to ward them off. It required the realization of all my hopes 
in regard to this voyage to reconcile me to the absence from home 
which it involved ; and yet, O miserable man 1 you have a prospect 
of reaping only disgrace and ruin. 

''Affairs, however, may yet take a turn, and prospects may 
brighten. The Beaver is not yet sold, and only about half the car- 
go. These may be restored to me by the tribunal of appeal, or one 
of our frigates may arrive here and compel a restoration of the 
whole with damages. The aggravation is so outrageous that I do 
not see how our government can fail to take cognizance of it, and, 
though it may be some time before the property is realized, yet I am 
confident it will be eventually. 



THE '^CANTON" ORDERED TO LIMA. 183 

*' May 7.— This morning the general sent for Mr. Coffin, of the 
Canton, and myself, and told us he was desirous of doing justice 
without further delay, and for this purpose had ordered the Canton 
to be got ready to proceed to Lima, where all our papers would also 
be sent, and where the tribunal of appeals would decide on the le- 
gality of the proceedings towards us here. Here, then, is a ray of 
hope for the restoration of the property, and, at any rate, a prospect 
of relief from this distracting state of suspense. If the property is 
restored, as one half the cargo is yet unsold, as the ship will remain 
at Talcahuana till the decision, and as it may be difficult to get from 
the government the amount already expended, it may yet be some 
time before I can leave this part of the world; but if I succeed in 
recovering the property all will end well." 

The Canton was equipped for sea and departed for 
Lima as rapidly as possible, and the relief even of a 
change of scene, after seven months of continued priva- 
tions, mortification, anxiety, and disgust was inexpressi- 
bly refreshing and encouraging. 



CHAPTER XL 

1818. 

Letters to tlie Yiceroy and to Mr. Astor. — Arrival at Lima. — Kecep- 
tion by the Yiceroy. — Goes to Valparaiso on a Secret Mission. — 
Tlie Beaver Restored. — Captain Biddle Supplies a First Officer. 

Although the authorities at Talcahuana pretended 
that the order to go to Lima was a vohmtary act on 
their part, adopted as a measure of justice, it was in re- 
ality the result of an order from the Viceroy of Peru, 
elicited in response to the following letter from my fa- 
ther, which he had sent by the commander of a ship of 
war. This letter, and the one which follows it to Mr. 
Astor, from Lima, I deem of such importance, from 
their intrinsic interest, and as illustrations of character, 
that I give them at length. 

*'To Ms Excellency Don Joaquin de la Pezuela, Cavalier of the 
Grand Cross of the Royal Order of Isabella the Catholic, Lieuten- 
ant-General of the Armies, Viceroy, Governor, and Captain-Gen- 
eral of Peru, etc. : 

'' Ship * Beaver,' Talcahuana, January 28, 1818. 
*'MosT EXCELLENT SiR, — While the kingdom of Chili remains in 
so unsettled a state as to possess no other than a military govern- 
ment; while, by drawing its resources from that of Peru, the evi- 
dence of its dependence on and subjection to that government is appar- 
ent, and, moreover, while the Viceroy of Peru is commander of the 
royal navy in these seas, by a part of which my ship was first taken 
possession of, I cannot suppose that your excellency, on being made 
acquainted with the conduct of the men in power here towards us. 



LETTER TO THE VICEROY. 185 

will fail to take cognizance of it, or will view with indifference the 
citizens of a power in amity with Spain, not only denied the com- 
mon rights of hospitality, but treated — through the machinations of 
two or three malicious, interested, and ignorant men in office — with 
a degree of rigor which would hardly be justifiable if our respective 
nations were actually at war with each other. 

*' A consciousness of the integrity and legitimacy of my views, of 
the distress by which I was compelled to enter the port, of my right 
to do so, secured to me by treaty, and of my having violated no law 
of this country are causes which relieve me from any feeling of ap- 
prehension of the event of the most rigid scrutiny in a tribunal 
composed of honest, intelligent, and honorable men, and I have 
therefore repeatedly urged the propriety of being sent to Lima, and 
have appealed to the decision of the tribunal there. But the men 
who have been so ready to condemn my valuable ship and cargo 
have other views, widely different from the dispensation of justice or 
the benefiting of the state ; and consequently have not only refused 
this, but, as if fearful that an order for this purpose might come 
from Lima, or by some other means the property escape their 
grasp, have issued a decree for taking out of the ship the amount of 
$100,000, and acted upon it with a degree of precipitancy which 
gives additional evidence of such apprehension. 

*' With a view apparently to save appearances, and as an apology 
for a trial, some formalities have been observed, but such only as, in 
any country where honesty is esteemed a virtue, would stamp its 
conductors with merited infamy. 

**The answers to the interrogatories w^ere attempted to be inter- 
preted, and the ship's papers translated, by two common sailors, 
men without education, and who know not any one rule of grammar 
even in their native language. 

** At a period when my life was despaired of from a severe attack 
of fever, as if to add insult and cruelty to violence and injustice, an 
officer was sent to me with the papers relating to the proofs, in or- 
der that I might make my defence. My total incapacity to give the 
least attention to this was not less evident than I believe it to have 
been gratifjdng to my persecutors, who, without hesitancy, named a 
Mr. Antigas to defend my cause — a man whom I had then never 
even seen, and the little acquaintance I have had with him since has 



186 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

not inspired me with much respect for his talents or energy; but i. 
doubt not he is such a person as suited the views of the prosecuting 
party. His acquaintance with the law I understand to be very su- 
perficial, and, moreover, that, not having a diploma, whatever efforts 
he might make in our behalf would have had no validity. Under 
such circumstances the issue of the trial (if such proceedings can 
merit the name) has been such as did not require a gift of prophecy 
to foretell. My ship and cargo have been declared a prize. 

*' Contrary to the accustomed usages of all nations, and as if con- 
scious of the unfairness of the proceedings, I have been denied the 
perusal of any papers relating to the process, and am yet ignorant 
of the reasons (if they have found any) for the condemnation. If, 
however, they are not more legitimate and well-grounded than those 
exhibited in the decree for taking out a part of the cargo, if there 
is equal evidence of such glaring injustice and prostitution of forms 
in -the former as in the latter, the most depraved tribunal would be 
ashamed not to reverse the decree of condemnation. Of the decree 
to which I allude I enclose your excellency a copy, not only as a 
curiosity, but as a specimen of the manner in which important con- 
cerns are conducted here, and will waive any comments other than 
such as are excited byihe inconsistency and contemptible hypocrisy 
of exhibiting a show of fairness in naming the commissioners to ap- 
praise the goods, and at the same time warning them against apprais- 
ing them too high. The consequence has been such as was naturally 
to be expected and was intended. The commissioners, held in awe by 
the tenor of the decree (if not influenced by interested motives) have 
selected the best and most valuable part of my cargo, and in many 
instances have appraised goods at less than their first cost, and in all 
were insensible of their enhanced value by the expense of insurance 
and freight. 

**The prospects of my vo5"age, even in the event of a speedy re- 
versal of the decree, are utterly ruined, and the amount of injury I 
have suffered will probably remain to be discussed and settled by the 
governments of Spain and the United States. 

** Nearly four months have already elapsed since my arrival in 
this port, and it is said to be the intention of the prosecutors that 
my detention shall be continued till the re-establishment of the royal 
government in St. Jago. But I cannot help flattering myself that 



LETTER TO MR. ASTOR. 187 

your excellency, reflecting on the precariousness of the event of 
Avar, will determine to despatch a conditional order for our proceed- 
ing to Lima, in the event of the reconquest of this kingdom not be- 
ing accomplished within a limited time. 

** In this rational hope, which seems to afford the only prospect of 
terminating the wretched state of suspense and persecution, I sub- 
scribe myself, with the most profound respect, etc., etc. 

*'R. J. Cleveland." 

''Lima, July 25, ISIS. 

''John Jacob Astor, Esq.,— At a period when it is obvious that 
the most important consequences may result from a speedy com- 
munication between this government and Talcahuana, they are sel- 
dom able to accomplish it in a more limited time than three months. 
The order for my proceeding to Lima was communicated to me 
on the 7th of May, immediately after its arrival, and, I have since 
learned, was the effect produced by my letter to the viceroy of the 
28th of January. He ordered the Beaver to be sent here at the same 
time, but General Ossorio, being apprehensive that he might be 
obliged to evacuate the place, detained her for the purpose of assist- 
ing in bringing away the garrison and inhabitants. This order has 
been reiterated by a ship which was despatched by this government 
and sailed on the 23d of June, and which ship is destined to supply 
the place of the Beaver. 

**I arrived here on the 28th of May with the ship's papers and all 
the documents relative to the process, and lost no time in waiting 
upon the viceroy in company with Mr. Coffin, the supercargo of the 
Canton. 

' ' Our interview was short. The viceroy accused the Americans 
and English of promoting and encouraging the rebellion by furnish- 
ing arms and ammunition, of contravening the laws by introducing 
merchandise into the country, and carrying away the specie, without 
paying a duty on the export or import, and generally of seriously 
injuring the commerce and prosperity of the country. But, never- 
theless (he added), we might rely on his protection while here, and 
that justice should be administered to us. Without waiting for a 
reply he abruptly left us. 

** Some weeks elapsed before it could be decided whether the cause 



188 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

should be tried by the royal hacienda, or by the marine, but was 
finally determined for the latter. In the meantime the papers had 
undergone a scrutiny by the general as well as the assessor (or at- 
torney) of the marine. The former assured us, as his private opin- 
ion, that there teas no cause for condemnation, and that the vessels 
and property must be restored to their original owners. The latter 
has expressed the same opinion to an acquaintance of mine, who 
communicated it to me. On the 28th ult. the Ontario returned from 
Valparaiso, and brought as passenger a Mr, Eobinson, vested with 
powers from Mr. Provost to prosecute the suit of the Beaver and 
Canton, and provided with some collateral evidence in favor of the 
former. On his being presented and making known the object of 
his visit, the viceroy assured him that the business was in proper 
train and should be accomplished as soon as possible, that the con- 
duct of the government of Talcahuana with regard to those vessels 
was very reprehensible, and that he had annulled all their proceed- 
ings. I am induced to believe, therefore, that there is little doubt of 
a favorable result here, and an immediate restoration of the vessels. 
But as it respects the property already expended, the poverty of this 
government is such that its immediate restoration is out of the ques- 
tion. Indeed, Mr. Provost was so satisfied of this that in his instruc- 
tions to Mr. Robinson he recommended him (on reversal of the sen- 
tence) to get an acknowledgment of the debt, but not to urge its 
payment. However politic this advice may be, I shall not be gov- 
erned by it, but, on the contrary, will leave no means unattempted 
which offer the least prospect of attaining this desirable end. The 
mission of Messrs. Provost and Eobinson may have had a beneficial 
influence on our. affairs, inasmuch as it evinces a watchfulness and de- 
termination on the part of our government to protect the commerce 
of its citizens; but I am fully convinced that, with this government, 
one such vessel as the Ontario is of more utility than a host of ne- 
gotiators, nor do I believe that the united powers of a Demosthenes 
and a Cicero, with truth and justice on their side, would be in any 
degree so efficacious as the silent eloquence of one of oux ^rmidable 
frigates. 

**I had scarcely accomplished delivering the cargo of the Beaver 
at Talcahuana, when the news of the destruction of the royal army 
threw everything into confusion and suspended the settlement of the 



LETTER TO MR. ASTOR. 189 

business with the commissioners. They had at this time appraised 
to the amount of about $188,000, and the goods remaining unap- 
praised I suppose to be worth $30,000 more. 

" When General Ossorio ordered them to pay into the treasury the 
amount of sales they had made, and to have the goods which re- 
mained on hand transported from Concepcion to Talcahuana, it was 
discovered that nearly one half of the cargo was yet imsold. It is 
not improbable that the general will appropriate as much of this as 
he can convert into cash, and the remainder will come here in the 
Beaver. If he should not have been able to effect a sale of these 
goods, and they are sent here, I hope to recover and realize an amount 
from them which will enable me to employ the ship advantageous- 
ly. My views now are on reversal of the sentence of Talcahuana, 
to get possession of the ship and as much of the property as I can 
without delay. The aggregate amount of principal and damages 
will be about $300,000, of which I may get from the cargo remain- 
ing on hand $100,000, leaving $200,000 due from the government. 

** As there is no probability of their possessing the means of pay- 
ing this directly, I shall propose to them to grant me some privileges 
for the introduction of cargoes, the duties on which to go towards 
cancelling the debt. At the present time a handsome voyage might 
be made to Valparaiso and back, but it is probable that before I am 
put in possession of my ship advantage will be taken of it by others 
and the business rendered not worth pursuing. In this case I shall 
try to get a license for the introduction of a cargo from China, on the 
presumption that here and at Canton I may be able to get from five 
to seven hxindred and fifty thousand dollars shipped on a propor- 
tion of the profits, which profits, combined with the duties on so 
large an amount, would furnish a capital to invest in China for the 
United States equal to the original exportations; but as this voyage 
would meet with powerful opposition from the Philippine Co., its 
being granted is very problematical. In the event of failure in this, 
there can be no opposition to a cargo from the United States, and as 
there exists no prospect of recovering the debt except by an opera- 
tion of this kind, not a moment should be lost in putting it in ex- 
ecution. I should, therefore, proceed immediately to Guayaquil, 
load my ship with cocoa, and sail direct for New York. 

"You will perceive, sir, that I am anxious to adopt that plan 



190 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

v/liich presents a prospect of the most speedy accomplishment, not 
alone from a conviction that despatch is the life of business, but hav- 
ing in view that a political change here may annihilate the advan- 
tage of our exclusive privilege; for notwithstanding I perceive no 
immediate prospect of such change, yet there is no misfortune which 
may occur which I ought not to take into consideration. 

''After all the flattering inferences I have drawn from the conduct 
and observation of the ruling men of this country (I mean Lima) re- 
lating to us, it must not be forgotten that dissimulation, deceit, ly- 
ing, and theft, with the combination of vices incident to excessive 
ignorance, bigotry, and superstition, are, with few exceptions, not 
less the characteristics of the higher than of the lower classes of 
society, and that if any evidence of the observance of the rule of 
justice is shown us, it will proceed alone from the apprehension of 
the mischief that may result from a contrary course. 

''I have now, sir, given you a general idea of the state of your 
affairs under my charge, and have been willing to incur the risk of 
being considered tedious, rather than that of being deficient in con- 
veying to 3^ou all the information of which I am desirous you should 
be possessed, and while I acknowledge that my mind continues to 
be unceasingly agitated with alternate hope and fear, I nevertheless 
flatter myself that my next will be more decisive and satisfactory. 

''August 1. — Since writing the preceding Mr. Provost has 
touched here (in the Blossom, English sloop-of-war) on his way to 
Columbia River for a purpose which you are doubtless better ac- 
quainted with than I am. Previous to his arrival I had determined 
to go to Valparaiso with the view of making arrangements with the 
government there for those advantages which the peculiar situa- 
tion of my ship leads me to believe will be exclusively mine. His 
opinion coincided with mine in the propriety of this step, particu- 
larly as my presence here would not accelerate the decision of our 
process, and also as, in case of any accident to myself, Mr. Robinson 
was here to attend to the business and fill my place. I shall sail to- 
morrow in the English frigate Andromache, Captain Sheriffe, who 
has politely offered me a passage. 

* ' The public exigencies are such here that, for several days past, 
the question of opening the port to foreigners has been agitated with 
a degree of warmth corresponding to its importance, and the jarring 



A SECRET MISSION. 191 

interests such a measure must necessarily create. It has been averted 
for the moment by the holders of goods contracting to loan the gov- 
ernment the amount of which they are in immediate want, but, as 
this mode of supply will doubtless be discovered to be precarious, it 
is highly probable that before the expiration of six months they 
will be compelled to admit foreign ships. In this event it is proba- 
ble that a competition, similar to that which has been exhibited in 
Chili, will take place here, and with similar effect. One or two 
good voj^ages may be made and many bad ones; indeed, the supply of 
manufactures which will be immediately thrown in here from Chili 
will be such as to make a speculation from the United States ex- 
tremely hazardous. 

"It is possible that before the order for the Beaver's coming here 
can be executed at Talcahuana, that place may have surrendered to 
the republicans, in which case I may find the ship at Valparaiso, 
ready to be delivered to me in conformity with the promise made by 
that government to Mr. Provost. If the place should not have fallen 
the ship will soon be here, and there is every reason to believe she 
will be restored to me, together with as much of the cargo as shall 
then remain unsold. 

**The bearer of this (Mr. Reynard) is as well informed of the 
probable result of my affairs here as I am myself, and I, therefore, 
refer you to him for such information as may have escaped me on 
this subject, and likewise for such on another subject as prudence 
forbids my descanting upon at the present juncture." 

The allusion at the conclusion of this letter has refer- 
ence to a delicate errand involving no inconsiderable 
personal risk. His ostensible object in going to Valpa- 
raiso was to make a shipment of wheat to Lima, on which 
he perceived an opportunity for large profits, the neces- 
sary capital for which was furnished by a rich mercan- 
tile house in Lima. But in addition to this he had an 
ulterior object which afforded the best possible evidence 
of the confidence reposed in him by the viceroy. He 
was, in fact, sent by him on a secret mission, and the 



192 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

license to ship wheat to Lima was given him, not only 
as a compensation, bnt as a blind to cover the real object 
of his visit to Valparaiso. The patriot government of 
Chili was negotiating for the purchase of a sixty-four- 
gun ship belonging to the East India Company, and then 
lying in that port ; but at the last accounts they had 
been unable to comply with the terms demanded. In 
order, if possible, to prevent the consummation of the 
bargain, my father was authorized by the viceroy to 
endeavor to make a secret purchase of her for account 
of the Spanish government. He took passage in the 
British frigate Andromache^ provided with the necessary 
authority for making the negotiation, but found on ar- 
riving at Valparaiso that the Chilians liad already con- 
summated the purchase and were in possession of the 
ship. 

Some considerable time elapsed before he could se- 
cure a vessel to take a return cargo to Lima, and various 
causes delayed her departure, so that it was late in Octo- 
ber before he arrived there. 

The following letter to Mr. Astor, from Valparaiso, 
shows how fully his mind was occupied with devising 
means to retrieve the misfortunes he had encountered. 
It will be seen by the explanation given in this letter 
that he had been restrained from writing by the same 
prudential reasons which affected him at Calcutta. 

*' Valparaiso, September 1, 1818. 

*' John Jacob Astor, Esq.,— At the date of my last I was on the 

point of leaving Lima for this place on a mission which had for its 

object the restoration of your ship and cargo. Whether a partial 

accomplishment of it will tend to this effect time only can deter- 



CAPTAIN BIDDLE AT CALLAO. 193 

mine. I had, however, such assurances of her restoration that I 
shall feel justified in being at the expense of taking with me to Lima 
two mates, if I can engage here such as will suit me. . . . 

*' I shall leave this in about three weeks for Lima, where I hope 
to find the cause decided favorably and fhe Beaver arrived and at 
my disposal. In this case, if the government do not pay me, I shall 
endeavor to get permission for the introduction of a large cargo from 
China, the duties on which to be appropriated to this purpose ; or, 
failing in this, I may possibly obtain sufficient to lade the ship with 
cocoa for your account for Europe or the United States; or I may be 
able to employ her advantageously for a few months between Lima 
and this port. In the adoption of either of these or any other plan 
I shall be influenced only by the desire of doing that which shall 
afford the fairest prospect of promoting your interest. Amid the 
perplexities and misfortunes which attend me I derive consolation 
from the reflection that I have afforded the royal government not 
even the shadow of cause for condemning the property; that it 
must therefore be restored; and that if the period of its recovery 
should yet be distant, it will, nevertheless, turn out more advan- 
tageously to you than to have arrived .^fe at this port. 

**The Packet, of Boston, is now here, having disposed of only about 
half her cargo, and at little or no advance on its cost, and generally 
the speculations here will eventuate unprofitably." 

On arriving at Callao he found that Captain Biddle, 
of the United States ship Ontario^ had been earnestly 
urging the -release of the Beaver^ by representing to 
the viceroy that her seizure was regarded by the 
United States government as a very serious cause of 
complaint. Of these efforts on the part of Captain 
Biddle my father says, in his narrative : 

*' These representations doubtless had an effect in hastening the 
business, but the restoration of the ship and what remained of her 
cargo were acts entirely independent of these efforts, and are of a 
description which prudential reasons prevent being made public." 
9 



194 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

This has reference to the secret mission on which he 
had been employed, and which it would have been dis- 
courteous to have published while the viceroy, Don 
Joaquin de la Peznela, was still living. 

The character of the viceroy seemed indeed to form 
a striking contrast with that of most of the Spanish 
officials whom he had encountered. He appreciated the 
frankness and honesty as well as the energy and busi- 
ness capacity of my father's character, and not only gave 
him marked proofs of his confidence at that time, but, 
years afterwards, when he accidentally met him at Ma- 
drid, he manifested his friendly remembrance by the 
kindest acts of hospitality. 

His first letter from Lima after his return, dated 
ITovember 30, 1818, announces the reversal of the de- 
cree of Talcahuana and the restoration of the ship. 

''Thus, my dear wife, after having been deprived of my com- 
mand of the Beaver for thirteen months, I am again reinstated. 
But what a contrast between the ship I left and the one restored 
to me ! It will require an outlay of at least five thousand dol- 
lars to put the ship in as good a state as when I left her, and if 
the labor were to be performed by the common seamen picked up 
here it would be an excessively tedious job; but fortunately Cap- 
tain Sheriff e, of the English frigate Andromache, is equally disposed 
with Captain Biddle to render me every assistance, and as * many 
hands make light work,' I shall soon have my ship put in good order 
again by men from these vessels of war. Although this govern- 
ment is not able to return me the amount of the cargo, the decision 
is highly important to all concerned, inasmuch as it must exonerate 
me from censure, and will afford us a just claim for the most ample 
damages. 

*' The satisfaction naturally arising from this event is nearly coun- 
terbalanced by the reflection that it must retard rather than accele- 
rate my return. The government has no means of cancelling their 



DAWNING HOPE. I95 

debt to me except that of a privilege for the introduction of a cargo 
here, the duties on which to be appropriated to this purpose. Hence 
the necessity of an operation which must add another year to my 
already long absence; but imperious duty demands this sacrifice, 
and in making it I become reconciled, from the prospect it affords of 
doing away with the necessity for any future separation. God grant 
that no untoward event may occur to blast this prospect, to annihi- 
late this cheering hope, which has tended to buoy me up amidst 
the multiplicity of ills by which I have been threatened to be en- 
gulfed. . . . 

*'I meet with general congratulations on the restoration of my 
ship by those who suppose it to be a great piece of good fortune; 
but unless some privilege is granted us it is directly the reverse, in- 
asmuch as my emolument was to be derived from the cargo, without 
which the ship is only an embarrassment, unless accompanied by 
some special license. 

''A petition for a voyage to China and back here, with a proposal 
that the duties thereon shall be appropriated to the payment of our 
claims, is now before the government; but as the viceroy is timid, 
and we have the whole weight of the Philippine Company against 
us, I do not flatter myself with success. Failing in this, there seems 
to be no other alternative than applying to the court of Spain— the 
fountain-head of prevarication, evasion, and dissimulation — and 
where the chance of success is in an exact ratio with their appre- 
hension of consequences. In this event I shall endeavor to lade my 
ship with cocoa and proceed to Gibraltar, where I may probably 
arrive in June, and be with you in the autumn of 1819. 

*' How does my heart leap with joy at the idea of being again at 
home! How does my imagination trace the expressive countenance 
of each individual of the dear circle! How naturally and recip- 
rocally will the observations of the ravages of time and care be 
called forth ! And how earnestly will my dear boys desire a relation 
of the adventures of their poor, old, careworn father." 

I cannot repeat the many interesting details which 
my father gives in his narrative of liis experiences after 
the restoration of the ship in endeavoring to retrieve his 
own fortunes, and also to make good the losses which 



196 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

Jiad fallen upon the underwriters, to whom the ship had 
been long since abandoned. But in order that their 
action on his return should appear in its true light it 
is proper to give a general outline of what he accom- 
plished. 

A leading merchant of Lima, presuming that he would 
adopt the usual shorthand course of selling the ship at 
auction for the benefit of the underwriters, proposed to 
him to buy her in for joint account, and employ her in 
freighting on the coast — his furnishing the capital being 
considered an equivalent to my father's services in com- 
manding the ship, and the profits to be shared equally. 
This course would have been legally justifiable, and in 
accordance with common custom, and there was no 
doubt would lead directly to fortune. But the proposal 
was at once declined, and solely from the sense of moral 
obligation to those who had suffered loss of property 
^vhich w^as under his care, and the feeling that if the 
ship could be advantageously employed it should be for 
their account. 

The first great difficulty was to find seamen. The 
original erew of the Beaver was long since dispersed, 
and many of them had entered the Chilian service. 
Captain Biddle, who had exhibited a very warm and 
friendly interest throughout his connection with the af- 
fair, rendered finally a most important service by grant- 
ing permission to one of his midshipmen to take the po- 
sition of first mate. This was Mr. Alexander B. Pink- 
ham, a most active, efficient, and intelligent oflicer. His 
services proved of very great value on more than one 
trying occasion, and he remained to the day of his death 



LETTER FROM LIEUT. PINKHAM. 197 

BO warm and true a friend of my father's that I am 
tempted to pay a tribute to his memory by quoting a 
portion of a letter which my father received from him, 
in acknowledgment of a copy of his published narra- 
tive, more than twenty years after these occurrences. 

The tone in which he alludes to them is no less hon- 
orable to himself, in the evidence of character it affords, 
tlian complimentary to the one he addresses : 

Portsmouth, Va., May 29, 1842. 
** R. J. Cleveland, Esq. : 

''My Dear 811%— ThQ author of **Gil Bias" shrewdly reflected 
that his book would be read by two classes of persons, whom he in- 
geniously described in the prefatory tale of the two students. 

** I think I may make three classes of your readers. The young 
commercial adventurer will find it a useful monitor from which he 
will learn how much may be done by pursuing an honorable course 
with industry and perseverance. To those whom age or infirmity 
have compelled to retire from the more stirring scenes of life it will 
be highly entertaining, while the fireside traveller will envy you the 
happiness of having visited so many different countries, and will 
judge from the easy and smooth manner in which you have detailed 
your adventures that their achievement must have been less difficult 
than you pretend, like the reverend doctors who thought it strange 
that the achievement of Columbus should be thought so great a 
matter. 

*'It is amusing to me to revert to what my impressions were of 
you the first time I saw you. To have supposed you had ever met 
with any adventures, either by sea or land, would have been farthest 
from my thoughts. That you might have led a life of industry and 
application to business was probable enough, and that you were 
familiar with accounts and business forms. I was not undeceived 
for several months, but when the time came for active exertions, our 
first movement (upon the attack of the Chilian fleet), and subsequent- 
ly on our voyage to Pisco, and during our short stay there, showed 
me that I had mistaken my man. 

" The year that I served in the Beaver was full of the most pleas- 



198 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

ing excitement. The pecuniary prospects of the voyages, the gen- 
tlemanly treatment I received from you, the elegant and comfort- 
able ship, the handsome style in which we lived, the liberal provision 
you made for everything as far as elegancies, comforts, and conven- 
iences were procurable; your excellent discipline with regard to of- 
ficers and men, accompanied with the most magnanimous generosity 
to all, your resolution and firmness under danger, whether from with- 
out or from internal commotion, inspired such an attachment for 
you as I have never felt for any other commander. " 



CHAPTER XII. 

1819, 1820. 

Operations on the Coast of Peru. — Proclamation of Blockade, wliicli 
he Sets at Defiance with Entire Success. —Satisfaction of the 
Yiceroy.— Sails for Kio Janeiro. 

At length, by permission of the viceroy, a crew was 
made up of captives who Iiad been taken from Chilian 
ships and imprisoned at Callao. These prisoners were 
of all nations, but principally English and Americans. 
No sooner did they learn that my fatlier had an order 
for the release of fifteen of their number than the anx- 
iety of every one to be included among the fortunate 
ones was so great as to make the task of selection very 
painful, and, at the risk of not getting the best men, 
he finally deputed the duty to the jailor. On the 28th of 
February an exciting occurrence took place in the har- 
bor, which afforded evidence of the danger he incurred 
from the shipment of such a crew. 

The viceroy had selected this day for his annual visit 
to the fieet and line of defence. As is often the case at 
that season, a dense fog prevailed, and while the viceroy 
was making the circuit of the bay on board the brig 
Maijpo^ the mist lifted for a few moments and revealed 
the presence of two Chilian ships of war, which had 
quietly made their way in, and were within half cannon- 
shot of the castle, and in close proximity to the Maipo^ 



200 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

whose retreat was near being cut off. A lively cannon- 
ade was at once opened by both parties, and a few min- 
utes later, when the fog again closed down, it became 
evident that they were firing at random, as several shot 
passed between the masts of the Beaver^ and were strik- 
ing the water both inside and out of w^here she lay. 
Fearing that the ship might sustain injury, the cables 
were slipped and all sail made to get out of the way. 
A few minutes later they found themselves close along- 
side another Chilian ship of sixty-four guns, and as 
friend could not be distinguished from foe in the dense 
fog, they came near having a whole broadside poured 
into them. Every man was at his station with lighted 
matches, and only waiting the order to fire, when tlie 
mistake was discovered. While speaking her, five of 
his men jumped overboard and were picked up by a 
boat from the ship of war. 

]^o result of any importance was achieved by this at- 
tack. After exchanging shots for half an hour, the 
Chilian ships withdrew without capturing a single Span- 
ish vessel, and came to anchor near the island of San 
Lorenzo. The Beaver returned to her anchorage, but 
the men manifested a mutinous spirit and showed so 
plainly their wish to desert to their countrymen that it 
became evident that vigorous measures of prevention 
must be adopted. The boats were, therefore, securely 
fastened, the officers armed themselves, and the men 
were told that instant death would be tlie portion of 
any one who attempted to desert. 

Meantime the commander of the Chilian navy. Lord 
Coclirane (a nephew of Sir Hugh Cochrane, who sent 



DEFIES THE BLOCKADE. 201 

my father into Tortola) bad issued a proclamation of 
blockade of the whole coast of Peru from its southern 
extremity to Guayaquil. The utter incompetency of 
the Chilian navy to enforce a legal blockade of even an 
eighth part of this great extent of coast rendered it ob- 
vious that the proclamation was only intended as an 
apology for the robbery of neutrals. As the govern- 
ment of the United States had declared and maintained 
its disregard of the paper blockades of England and 
France, there was no reason to doubt that tlie same 
principle would apply to this case, and my father deter- 
mined to set it at defiance, trusting to being sustained 
by his government, and feeling confident also that Chili 
w^ould be very cautious of committing any outrage at 
the risk of offending her best friend. This decision was 
in opposition to that of all the other neutral agents, and 
the Beaver was the only one of the twelve neutral ves- 
sels then lying in the port of Callao whose destination 
was not defeated and prospects ruined by this proclama- 
tion. 

I quote the following from my father's published ac- 
count : 

** Being all prepared to sail on the 8th of March, I went on board 
the O'Higgins frigate to demand my men who had deserted, but 
with no expectation that they would be restored. 

*' When I made known the object of my visit to the captain, an 
Englishman named Foster, he not only peremptorily refused to give 
them up, but insolently expressed his regret that more of them had 
not deserted. 

*' As I was leaving his ship he tauntingly held up the proclama- 
tion of blockade, and bid me beware of the consequences. I re- 
plied that I was as well acquainted with my business as he was with 
9-^ 



202 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

his, and, therefore, the caution, or threat, was unnecessary and mis- 
placed. 

*' I next went on board the Lautaro to see Captain Guise, with 
whom I became acquainted at Valparaiso. The friendly and polite 
reception I met with from this gentleman formed a striking con- 
trast to that of Captain Foster, and presented a remarkable instance 
of the different conduct under the same circumstances of officers 
of the same grade, one of whom had been reared and educated in 
polished society, and the other among the low and vulgar. 

'* Captain Guise expressed regret that their present want of men 
was such that no influence he could use with Lord Cochrane would 
be of any avail. 

*' In speaking of the proclamation of blockade, I did not fail to 
express my opinion that the United States would support me in not 
considering those ports blockaded before which there was no naval 
force, and that I had determined to act in conformity with that 
opinion, which he seemed to consider a correct one. 

'' On returning to the Beaver without the men, I perceived a gen- 
eral manifestation of dislike among the crew to go to sea with so 
many short of our complement; but there was no possibility of pro- 
curing others, and delay would be more likely to change the aspect 
of affairs for the worse than the better. I therefore called all hands 
aft; represented to them the easy and short voyage we had to per- 
form; that the numbers now on board were an ample complement 
for any voyage on this coast; that I had engaged an extra number 
originally in order to make the greater despatch in lading the ship, 
but that, nevertheless, if they would go to work cheerfully, I would 
engage to divide among them the wages of the five men who had 
deserted, until I could ship others in their stead. This had the de- 
sired effect. They went with alacrity to the windlass, hove up the 
anchor, made sail, and at 4 p.m. I was once again on the broad ocean 
in uncontrolled command of the Beaver, 

*'More than two years had elapsed since the seizure of the ship 
at Talcahuana, and during that time I had experienced nothing but 
a continued series of vexations, altercations, and the most prolonged 
and aggravating state of suspense. The freedom from thraldom, 
therefore, which I now experienced, was at first difficult to believe, 
and many days passed before I possessed an entire consciousness of 
having regained the power of independent action." 



MUTINY. 203 

On the fourth day they arrived at Pisco, where the 
governor, after examining the viceroy's license, gave 
him an hospitable reception. Here they were to take on 
board a quantity of brandy, which was a slow and diffi- 
cult undertaking, as it was contained in jars of twenty 
gallons and was sent off in hxunches and had to be hoist- 
ed over the ship's sides in an open roadstead at the im- 
minent risk of breaking, from the rolling of the ship. 
The knowledge possessed by the crew of the unusual 
value of every man, owing to their feeble number, and 
the impossibility of supplying the loss should any one 
desert, led them to presume upon attempting a measure 
which w^ould have subverted all discipline and endan- 
gered the safety of ship and cargo. This was the 
bringing on board a jar of brandy to be held in their 
own possession. My father was on shore at the time, 
but Mr. Pinkham, seeing the man with it, very judicious- 
ly tried to persuade him to give it up, promising it 
should be dealt out to them in proper rations. This 
they would not submit to, and swore they would do as 
they pleased with their own liquor. Perceiving remon- 
strance to be in vain,. Mr. Pinkham very properly 
knocked the jar out of the fellow's hands, which broke 
it and spilled all the brandy. 

**The most abusive language then followed and the mutiny be- 
came general. In the evening I received a note by one of the shore 
boats, detailing these transactions and the continued insubordination 
of the crew. It was too late to go on board that evening, and I had 
consequently time to resolve in my mind the most prudent and 
judicious mode of proceeding. I was offered a file of soldiers, to 
take as many of the men on shore as I chose and have them whipped ; 
but though this could easily be done, it would only tend to increase 



204 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

the difficulty when we should be beyond the reach of such aid. It 
was obvious that, to secure any further services from these men, they 
must be subdued by the efforts of myself and officers alone, and cost 
what it might, I determined to try the issue, and convince them that 
there could be but one master to the Beaver. Accordingly, on going 
on board and finding my officers ready to second me (all work on 
board continuing to be suspended), we determined that seizing up 
the ringleader to the shrouds and giving him a good whipping be- 
fore the whole crew would be the readiest and best way of settling 
the difficulty. But if the men made the resistance that was appre- 
hended, the attempt might be attended with serious consequences. 

*' Having loaded our pistols and prepared the requisite seizings, I 
called the ringleader, by name, to come aft, which he readily obeyed, 
no doubt with the expectation of being supported by his comrades. I 
asked him how he had dared to speak to the officer of the ship in the 
insolent manner he had done ? He replied that the officer had broken 
his jar of brandy, and he'd be damned if he or any one else should 
do any more work until it was made up to him. I then turned to 
the mates and told them to seize him up to the rigging, whereupon 
the crew, who had been watching us from the forecastle, began mov- 
ing aft in a body. I, therefore, immediately took a pistol in each 
hand, and meeting them half-way, leisurely laid a rope across the 
deck, and threatened with instant death any man who should dare 
to cross it. This had the desired effect. No one had the temerity 
to try me. The fellow was whipped till he begged for mercy and 
promised never to behave amiss again; and, indeed, he was ever af- 
ter an orderly, good man. With my pistols still in hand, 1 then 
went forward and peremptorily ordered the men to their duty on 
pain of like punishment to any one who refused. I allowed them 
no time for consultation, but calling them by name, ordered them 
immediately on various parts of ship's duty. Not one of them 
saw fit even to hesitate, and they were ever after as orderly a crew 
as I could desire. 

''Having now passed a week at Pisco, and taken on board six hun- 
dred jars of brandy and wine, we sailed for Guanchaca, and thus 
demonstrated that this part of the coast was not in a state of block- 
ade in the true and legitimate acceptance of that term." 



RETUKN TO CALLAO. 205 

At Giianchaca the question was pnt at final rest by 
an actual meeting with a Cliilian brig of war, which sent 
a boat on board with a request that tlie captain of the 
Beaver would come on board with his papers. 

After half an hour's conversation with Captain Spry 
(with whom he had become acquainted at Valparaiso), 
my father convinced him that it would be very unwise 
to molest him. He, therefore, endorsed his register, 
and sent liim back to his ship with friendly wishes. 
From Guanchaca he proceeded to Malabrigo and thence 
to Pacasmayo, finding the merchants at every port anx- 
ious to avail themselves of the opportunity to freight 
goods to Callao. On the 19th of May, having taken on 
board a cargo exceeding thirteen thousand quintals, 
which brought the ship's chainwales almost even with 
the water, he sailed for Callao. Being anxious to learn 
the state of affairs before venturing too near, he looked 
in at Guacho, and, seeing an English brig lying there, 
sent a boat to obtain information, which returned with 
intelligence that the Chilian squadron had left the bay 
nearly a month previous, and there was no impediment 
to entering. 

The arrival at Callao of so large a cargo of wheat and 
rice was an auspicious event for the people of Lima. 
Precisely three months had elapsed since his departure, 
and, by the successful accomplishment of the voyage, the 
fact was demonstrated that there was no cause to appre- 
hend that the supply of breadstuffs would be cut off by 
a Chilian blockade. The earnings of the ship during 
this period exceeded $20,000, payable immediately on 
landing the cargo. The viceroy appeared now, for the 



206 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

first time, to appreciate the great advantage derivable 
from neutral commerce. He gave my father a most 
cordial and flattering reception, complimented him upon 
the boldness manifested in disregarding Lord Cochrane's 
proclamation of blockade, and declared his readiness to 
give him a license to go to any part of the coast he 
pleased. 

After so many years of adversity the turning-point 
seemed at last to have been reached, and surely if ever 
success was won by bull-dog tenacity of purpose and un- 
flinching courage, both moral and physical, it was so in 
his case. 

It is deliciously refreshing to read a letter from him 
\vhich forms such a contrast to the gloomy tone which 
had so long pervaded his correspondence as the fol- 
lowing^ : 

^ *'LiMA, J?^7i6 22, 1819. 

*' At length, my dear wife, I have the delight of conveying to you 
the cheering intelligence that my affairs are prospering even beyond 
my expectations. The ebb, which has been setting so many years 
and so strong against me, seemed to have descended to its lowest 
point about this time last year, since which there has been a gradual 
flood, till my arrival from my voyage coastwise, when the number 
of favorable events which have been crowded into a small space 
leads me to be apprehensive that fortune really intends to yield to 
him who has courted her so long. 

**0f the number of neutral vessels lying here at the time Lord 
Cochrane's proclamation was issued, mine is the only one which has 
dared bid defiance to it in pursuing the plan I had marked out be- 
fore it was issued. I have accomplished it successfully, and by the 
great rise in the price of wheat shall realize an advantage for myself 
of about $10,000. 

*'Ihad no expectation that my adventure to Valparaiso would 
yield more than sufficient to pay my debts there; but, by very di- 
rect information. I have scarce a doubt it has yielded a profit of 



AT LENGTH FORTUNE SMILES. 207 

$8000 or $10,000. I had $5000 specie on board the Macedonian, 
bound for China, at the time that all the money destined for that 
vessel was seized by Lord Cochrane. I expected mine had gone in 
the general sv*^eep, but find that the evidence given of it being mine 
was so satisfactory that they decliued taking it. 

*' These items, added to other operations of minor magnitude, give 
me a property of about $40,000, acquired since my first arrival in 
Lima. Add to this the most flattering reception from the viceroy, 
and assurance that he would grant me permission to go to any part 
of the coast I pleased — a permission which, from the little competi- 
tion, must soon enable me to lade the ship with the produce of the 
country, and which, taken to Europe or the United States, will be 
equal to replacing the original capital, with the addition of premium 
and interest. I know not with whom I shall have to account for 
the voyage on my arrival, as Mr. Astor has abandoned to the under- 
writers; but, even if I should again be unfortunate, if they possess 
any generous feelings they cannot fail to acknowledge that there 
has been no want of perseverance and industry on my part. While 
I was on my passage from Pacasmayo to this port the frigate Mace- 
donian had been here, and proceeded down the coast in search of 
me. We missed each other, and this I regret exceedingly, not so 
much from the expectation of any advantage her presence here 
would have produced, as from having failed in receiving those let- 
ters from home which the notoriety of her destination, not less than 
the port from whence she sailed, induces the belief were on board. 

*' Daring my various peregrinations I have never at any time 
been so long without hearing from you. I am glad this is not the 
case with you, as the frequent opportunities by v/hich I have writ- 
ten must present you a letter every two or three months. 

*' With a view of realizing some property without delay, not less 
than the hope of affording you the means of gratifying every wish 
to be com.passed by money, I have made arrangements for a large 
sum at Valparaiso, in addition to the profits on my adventure there, 
amounting together to between $30,000 and $40,000. This property 
I have ordered remitted either to Stephen Williams, of London, or 
to Samuel G. Perkins & Co. , of Boston, whichever can be done 
most advantageously, to be held subject to the control of William 
or George Cleveland. I now write George on the subject; and, af- 



208 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

ter lie has paid sums to the amount of about $13,000, 1 desired him 
to place the remainder at your disposal. You will therefore, my 
dear wife, probably have the control of about $25,000. With the 
whole of this money, believe me, you can do nothing that can dis- 
please me. If AY., or G., or M., or H., or S. want it, give it, or any 
portion of it, to them if you think proper. If you choose to spend 
it in the embellishment of the estate, do so. Indeed, my dear, if you 
should throw it away, only let me know the doing so has afforded 
you pleasure, and I will approve of the act. I have no other wish 
than to express to you in intelligible terms that property is only val- 
uable to me in proportion as it contributes to your happiness. 

*' I shall sail again to-morrow for Pisco, there to lade with brandy 
for the port I was at last, and touching here on my way down, then 
to return with a cargo of wheat and rice. I hope to perform this 
voyage in less than three months, and with a profit of $40,000 for 
the ship and $10,000 for myself. 

*' I hope to meet you before the expiration of the year 1820, but 
whether I shall return by way of China or from hence to Europe 
and the United States, is a matter of great uncertainty. 

*'I could almost immediately return with a decent competency, 
and with a prospect of giving satisfaction to the owners of the ship ; 
but at the present moment everything concurs to give me almost the 
monopoly of the trade of this coast — to present so brilliant a pros- 
pect that not to take advantage of it, to give over the chase when 
fortune is so near within my grasp, would be an evidence of imbe- 
cility so glaring, a want of enterprise so inconsistent with my char- 
acter, that I am confident, although the object should be alone that 
of meeting you, you could not fail to experience mortification 
from it. 

*' I am now on the point of sailing, and, from the careless manner 
in which this letter is written, you will perceive I am hurried. In- 
deed, to perform the duties of master and supercargo of such a ship 
as the Beaver, without even a clerk, requires great industrj'- on a 
common voyage, but much more when the property is turned so 
often. My various speculations on my private account have given 
me so much more property than I can employ in my privilege in 
the ship that for some time I have had a considerable sum lying by. 
If I had had any intelligent, trusty young man with me I could have 



A COASTING VOYAGE. 209 

put liim in the way of making liis fortune and adding greatly to 
mine. 

*'I fully intended to have written to the dear boys, but, having 
neglected to do it till there is no longer time, I will prepare a letter 
for them, and likewise complete for you the narrative of the mar- 
vellous adventures of K. J. C, already begun, and send them both 
by the first good opportunity. 

**0f the political state of this country, it differs very little from 
what it was at this time last year. The republicans have the as- 
cendency at sea, but, as their opponents have laid by all their ship- 
ping, there is no chance of making prizes; consequently the main- 
tenance of their ships must come from themselves, and their resources 
are not competent to it for any length of time. How the business 
will end time only can determine, but the method taken by the Eng- 
lish commanders of the Chilian ships to make converts to republi- 
canism, that of first stripping them of their property, seems to have 
produced a contrary effect. A want of activity, a want of enter- 
prise, a sluggishness in forming plans and an eternity in executing 
them, prove that these people are the legitimate descendants of those 
of whom, more than two centuries past, the other Europeans used 
to say, ' Let death come from Spain,' implying thereby that it would 
be so long in coming that nothing need be apprehended from it. 

** Adieu, my dear wife. May death neither come from Spain nor 
any other quarter till we have had one more embrace. My love to 
the boys and all the family. 

''Yours, as ever, most affectionately, Eichard." 

His next operation was to charter the ship for a 
four-months' voyage on the coast, at $10,000 per month. 
This voyage^ — to Huasco and Pacasmayo, and thence to 
Valparaiso and back to Callao — was successfully per- 
formed, although he was brought to on the way to Val- 
paraiso by a Chilian 64-gun ship, bearing tlie flag of 
Admiral Blanco, who, on being satisfied that the ship 
had been chartered and laden on English account, al- 
lowed him to go on without molestation. 



210 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAYIGATOR. 

The following letter from Yalparaiso evinces that he 
appreciated the importance of taking the tide in his af- 
fairs at the flood, and was making the most of his op- 
portunities : 

** Yalparaiso, January 19, 1820. 

* * I shall sail from here to-morrow for Callao with a full cargo of 
wheat for account of the charterer of the ship. After unlading my 
ship and settling my affairs it is most probable I shall proceed to 
Guayaquil, and lade the ship with cocoa for Europe or the United 
States, and determine which at Rio Janeiro, w^here I shall stop on 
my way. While fortune seems propitious I am giving her such an 
opportunity of evincing her favors as appears to astonish the na- 
tives. In addition to attending to the duties of my own ship I have 
purchased the ship Ocean, of three hundred and sixty-five tons, and 
despatched her with a cargo of wheat for Callao; one half of the 
fine ship Zephyr, of three hundred and sixty tons, and have char- 
tered the Swedish ship DroUingen, of five hundred tons, all loaded 
with wheat for my private account. My expectation of emolument 
is not so much from profit on the wheat as from the advantageous 
employment of the ships; and should the demand for them at Lima 
be equal to what it was when I left there, I shall realize a handsome 
fortune. Indeed, if I v/ere as sanguine as I was in my younger days, 
I should say it was certain; but, alas! I have been too severely 
taught the uncertainty of everything mundane not to be prepared 
for disappointment. . . . 

' ' The Chilian navy is now" entirely commanded and officered by 
English adventurers, men of desperate fortunes, who, imder the 
mask of giving freedom to this country, are in pursuit of their own 
fortunes, and regardless of means of their attainment. If it were 
not that we have a frigate in this neighborhood, no American vessel 
could navigate here with safety." 

On his return to Callao, having successfully accom- 
plished the object for which the ship was chartered, he 
found he had the control of so large an amount of 
property for account of the owners of the Beaver^ be- 
sides the handsome fortune he had accumulated for 



PKEPARATIONS FOR RETURNING HOME. 211 

himself, that he felt justilied in making immediate prep- 
arations for returning home. Indeed, the condition of 
the ship indicated but too clearly that she would, ere 
long, be incapable of making the passage. He therefore 
contracted for a cargo of cocoa, to be taken on board at 
Guayaquil, and busied himself with settling his affairs 
and making arrangements for the employment of the 
other ships in his service. 

On the 12th of March he sailed for Guayaquil, and 
on the 10th of April writes to his wife from that place 
as follows : 

*' Guayaquil, April 10, 1820. 

" I came to this place with the expectation of lading with cocoa 
for the United States, for which purpose I had contracted with a 
merchant of Lima, to he delivered to me here, but am disappointed. 
A sudden and unexpected demand has put it out of the power of 
the agent here to fulfil the contract, and with about two thirds of 
a cargo I am on the point of returning to Callao, in hopes of making 
up the remainder there. If I succeed I may be with you as soon as 
you receive this; but whether I am or not, I ought to make you ac- 
quainted with the state of my affairs. 

'* The ship Drottingen, by which I send this ma Europe, is loaded 
with cocoa, entirely on my account— a cargo which cost upwards of 
$80,000 — of which I risk only one half, the other half being on re- 
spondentia. Her supercargo, Mr. Coit, will forward this to you from 
Europe. 

*'I am proprietor of one half the fine ship Zephyr, of Providence, 
for which I gave $15,000. This ship is now engaged in a profitable 
freighting business on the coast of Peru. The proceeds of these 
freights will be deposited in safe hands in Lima, so that there will 
be nothing but the ship at risk till the closing of the voyage ma 
China, Europe, or the United States. 

'*I am likewise owner of one half the ship Ocean, of three hun- 
dred and sixty-five tons, which cost me $7500. This ship had a 
freight of $16,000, engaged from hence to Callao, but the governor 



212 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

here lias thought proper to throw obstacles in the way of her pro- 
ceeding, and she must therefore remain here till I can get an order 
from the viceroy for her release. She will be advantageously em- 
ployed in freighting on this coast, and is commanded by my former 
mate, Mr. Pinkham. 

**I have likewise an interest of $15,000 in the voyage of the brig 
Macedonian, Captain E. Smith, to China and back to Callao. As 
this cargo will be introduced into Lima on very favorable terms, the 
prospect is very flattering. She is expected back in three or four 
months. In the Beaver I shall have on board for my own account 
about eight tons of cocoa and eight or ten thousand dollars in specie. 

*' Thus, my dear wife, you will perceive that if I have done well 
for my owners I have not done less for myself, and if I arrive safe 
it may fairly be presumed there will be no necessity for navigating 
more. May the joyful day of our meeting soon arrive, when there 
will be no alloy of anticipated separation." 

Eeturning to Callao, it was found necessary to dis- 
charge part of the cargo, in order to recalk tlie sliip 
before proceeding to sea. This being accomplished, 
and the ship ready for sea, he sailed for Eio Janeiro 
on the evening of March 11, 1820. 



CHAPTER XIII. 

1820. 

Recapitulation of the Occurrences of Three Years.—Letter from the 
Underwriters, and His Eeply.— Home Again. — Disgraceful Con- 
_duct of the National Insurance Company. 

Three years had now elapsed since his departure from 
New York, and in all that time he had received no tid- 
ings from his family. A packet of letters had been sent 
to him by the frigate Macedonian^ but the chaplain who 
liad it in cliarge had died on the passage, the package 
was not left at any port where he might have found it, 
and as the frigate failed to fall in with him the letters 
only reached him several months after his return home. 

A recapitulation of the leading events in his experi- 
ence since the seizure of his ship may here be appropri- 
ately introduced. 

After all the property intrusted to his charge had 
been taken from him and he had suflFered all the an- 
guish incident to such a situation, aggravated by the 
efforts of his captors to make his situation so uncom- 
fortable as to force him to abandon the attempt to re- 
cover it, he had finally succeeded by persistent eifort in 
recovering the ship and a remnant of the cargo. Within 
a twelvemonth of the time of her restoration he had 
employed her so advantageously as to have paid all the 
expenses of repairing, revictualling, and remanning her, 



214 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

and had shipped on board of her a cargo of cocoa for 
New York, nearly or quite equal in value to the original 
capital, besides specie more than enough to defray all the 
expenses of the ship up to the time of her arrival in 
New York ; and, in addition, a clear and legithuate claim 
on the Spanish government for the original amount of 
cargo and damages. All this for the sole account of the 
owners of the Beaver. 

For himself — having before the restoration of the 
ship begun a speculation at Valparaiso which laid the 
foundation of further operations — he had succeeded in 
acquiring such a property as the most successful accom- 
plishment of his original plans would not have produced. 

To have thus turned defeat and disaster into victory, 
and the achievement of a greater success than was origi- 
nally anticipated for the voyage, was surely a sufficient 
cause for self-gratulation and the anticipation of a most 
gratifying reception from the owners, whose interests 
he had thus carefully guarded. 

It was, therefore, with no small degree of surprise 
when, on the point of sailing, that he received from 
the underwriters ?i, peremptory order to return immedi- 
ately home with the ship. They acknowledged at the 
same time the receipt of his letter of August previous, 
informing them that the ship was earning $10,000 per 
month, and as she would hardly be worth that sum her- 
self in New York, the inference was unavoidable that 
they felt doubtful of his honesty. The revulsion of 
feeling excited by this implication is manifested in the 
following letter, which he wrote in reply, and sent up 
by the pilot-boat on arriving in New York, before going 
on shore, liimsell. 



LETTER TO THE UNDERWRITERS. 215 

"Lima, JuneS, 1820. 
"To THE Owners of the Ship 'Beaver': 

" Gentlemen,— When on the point of leaving this for New York I 
received {via Panama) your letter of January 20, ultimo, in which 
is implied apprehensions relative to your property under my charge 
which surprise and mortify me. Your anxiety to bring this ' long- 
pending concern to a close,* however great, cannot surpass mine. 
Indeed, gentlemen, if the whole amount of property I have acquired 
for you was to be the recompense of an additional month's absence 
from my family, to that which I have considered limited by duty, I 
should hold such fortune too dearly purchased by such sacrifice. 

" From the information I possessed of the little value of ships in 
New York I did not suppose the Beaver would sell for more than 
enough to defray the expense of delivering her there, and concluded 
that if I would consent to risk the loss of my time in the business of 
freighting, the owners of the Beaver could not fail to consent to risk 
a ship which circumstances rendered of so little value. 

"The peremptory order conveyed in your letter above-named is 
not less evidence of erroneous judgment on my part than of excess- 
ive alarm for the safety of the property on yours. My various let- 
ters by the China and Drottingen, from Guayaquil, and by the Tyne, 
from this place, each enclosing a bill of lading of the cargo shipped 
on board the Beaver for your account, and bound for New York, 
will afford you convincing evidence of my having anticipated your 
wishes, or rather orders^ for closing this long -pending concern. 
They will likewise show you that, in the space of twelve months 
from my first sailing from Callao, I had created a capital sufficient 
to lade the Beaver with a cargo whose value in Europe will exceed 
$100,000, besides defraying all the expenses of the ship for the time. 
In not having accomplished this before your patience was exhausted 
I hope forgiveness, and expect it not less from the consciousness of 
having acted with a view to your approbation than of my belief of 
your acceding to the axiom that ' to err, is human ; to forgive, di- 
vine.' 

" I have on board for your account 840,456 pounds of cocoa, be- 
sides which there will be a balance in your favor of five or six thou- 
sand dollars, which I shall bring in specie. 

"I have the honor to be, gentlemen, with all the respect due from 



216 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

one wlio is subject to orders to those from whom such orders ema- 
nate, Your most obedient," etc. 

To appreciate fully the force of the sting which had 
elicited such a response as the above it is necessary to 
bear in mind tlie fact that the voyage from the outset 
was of his own planning, and its management had been 
of necessity left to his own discretion. After the com- 
plete destruction of all the hopes, anticipations, and in- 
tentions which had originally been formed or indulged 
in regard to its results by the seizure of the ship 
at Talcahuana, it was still less than before in the 
power of the owners to give him any directions or even 
advice. 

His subsequent management could not have been con- 
ducted with greater zeal, pertinacity, or courage, had he 
been the only one interested in the retrieval of the prop- 
perty, and to the persistent urging of his demand upon 
the authorities at Talcahuana and Lima the final rever- 
sal of the decree and restoration of the property was 
due. The ability and independence he had exhibited 
throughout the whole course of the affair afforded the 
best possible evidence of the wisdom originally exhibited 
in intrusting it to him, and were such as could not have 
been reasonably expected, and certainly would rarely 
have been found, in one who was merely acting under or- 
ders. It is difficult, therefore, to conceive a more pain- 
ful position, to a sensitive man, than that in which he 
was placed by receipt of such an order at the moment 
when his heart was glowing with the anticipation of 
the well-earned approbation of those for whose interests 
ho had labored so hard and suffered so much. It must 



LETTER TO MR. ASTOR. 217 

be borne in mind that tbe officers of the ISTation- 
al Insurance Company, to whom the ship had been 
abandoned, were strangers to my father, having no 
other than a pecuniary interest in the result of the 
enterprise. 

To Mr. Astor he wrote^a very long letter, accom^ 
panied with a clear and exact account of all his trans- 
actions, in which he says : 

**I cannot believe that jou have at any time entertained a doubt 
of my ever being actuated in this business by other than the most 
honorable motives, but I am aware that in a voyage involved in so 
much intricacy as this, so much at variance with the original in- 
structions, and so i)eculiarly marked by vicissitude of bad and good 
fortune some elucidation would necessarily be required and, there- 
fore, lest accident should i^revent a verbal explanation, I have 
thought proper (not less for my own satisfaction than for yours) to 
make the following statement " 

This statement is a summary of all that he had accom- 
plished and a rendition of the award of the tribunal of 
appeal establishing the claim on the government of 
Spain for the "full amount of damage arising from loss 
of property, loss of time, and loss arising from the de- 
struction of one of the most flattering enterprises ever 
undertaken from the United States. 

''As our claim for these losses amounts to $408,766, as its cor- 
rectness is indisputable, and, therefore, must be paid ; as I shall be 
not less instrumental in the recovery of the property by the circum- 
stance of placing my opponents in the wrong, than in its augumenta- 
tion by placing it where its value was so much enhanced, there can 
exist no doubt of my being entitled to the same commission on the 
amount recovered that I should have received if I had prosecuted 
the voyage without interniption.'' 

10 



218 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

The following letter to my mother requires no ex- 
planation : 

**Ship * Beaver' (The Highlands of Keversink in sight), 

''October 6,1820. 

*' My Dear Wife, — To-morrow I shall probably be in New York, 

once more in the land of freedom, and I hope to bid farewell — a 

long farewell— to the toils of the ocean. In conformity with my 

custom and with that method and consistency of which I know you 

to be an advocate, I prepare a letter to go to the post-office with the 

ship's letters, that not a moment may be lost in advising you of my 

arrival. 

■jf -jf * "jf * * * 

''Our passage round Cape Horn was attended with nothing ex- 
traordinary or terrific. The absence of the sun rendered it extreme- 
ly gloomy, and as we happened to be there just at the change of the 
moon the nights were very dark and tedious. We used to breakfast 
by candle-light at half-past eight, and to see the sun set at half-past 
three. 

*' We, however, made a very tolerable passage for a loaded ship, 
arriving at the beautiful port of Eio Janeiro on the 14th of xiugust. 
More than three years had now elapsed since leaving home, and dur- 
ing that extended period I had not received a line from my family 
or from any one who could give me any account of them. My first 
step, therefore, was to call on the American houses to see if they had 
not letters for me, but, alas ! I found none from my family, nor was 
there one among the masters or consignees who could give me any 
account of them. You will, therefore, naturally imagine, my dear, 
that my mind was filled with the most gloomy forebodings, and that 
I accounted for not receiving letters by the repugnance arising from 
conveying disastrous intelligence. 

''With such discouraging impressions, I was busily engaged in 
preparing to bend my course to that country where I once had a 
home — the existence of which now seemed extremely doubtful — 
when, two days before my departure, the Fanny arrived from New 
York and brought me a letter from my dear wife, one from Lucy, 
and one from George, all dated so recently as June — only about 
seventy days before. As the fond mother with distracted anxiety 



LETTER TO HIS WIFE. 219 

watches for the restoration of suspended animation in a beloved child, 
and is incapable of expressing her joy on the appearance of return- 
ing life, so was the transition in the mind of your husband, from the 
most deep-toned anxiety to ease, joy, and tranquillity of mind, not 
less intense or less capable of being expressed. 

* * * * ^ -Sf * 

** I shall meet you more satisfied with myself than I have ever been 
before. I doubt whether my voyage has any parallel in the annals 
of navigation. It presents not the brilliancy of victory, but it is a re- 
treat which ought to be equally creditable to the ability of the com- 
mander. Yet I am not without apprehensions that the owners will con- 
sider my charges indicative of my setting too high a value upon my 
services, and may see fit to dispute them. It is likewise doubtful if they 
are not jealous of what I have done for myself and may wish to share 
in it, in which case they will discover that the man who has so per- 
severingly and successfully defended their property, will not allow 
any infringement on Ms own. I must necessarily be detained two or 
three days in New York before I can set out for home, and it is very 
doubtful whether the owners will be disposed to grant me any indul- 
gence, but may insist on my remaining until the ship is unloaded. 
In this case I shall not shrink from the dictates of imperious duty. 
The fact is, I have written them two very sharp letters on the sub- 
ject of the terms in which they conveyed to me the orders for my 
return, and it is uncertain how they will receive them. 

*'I intend to despatch immediately one or two ships for Lima, 
either from New York, Providence, or Boston. Perhaps William 
would like to take charge of an expedition to that quarter of the 
world. I suggest it, that he may have time to think of it. If there 
was a certainty that all the property I have afloat would be returned 
in safety there would be enough for both of us, but the embarrass- 
ments we have witnessed should teach us that w^e ought not to al- 
low a favorable opportunity to pass till we possess something more 
stable and permanent. 

''I am now in imagination at Lancaster with my wife, my chil- 
dren, brothers, sisters, and friends, and, while seated at the parlor 
window, alternately glancing at the group within and the beautiful 
autumnal scenery without, what associations, what recollections will 
not be roused by hearing from your piano the notes of * Ella Rosen- 



220 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

berg,' 'Henry's Cottage Maid/ 'The Flowers of the Forest,' etc.? 
Alas! my dear wife, can those who know care, danger, and toil only 
by name, and whom fortune has always nursed in the lap of ease, 
form any idea of the luxurious enjoyments which are crowded into 
short spaces on such occasions? 

''But enough of paper conversations. This, I hope, closes our 
epistolary correspondence, inasmuch as I flatter myself with not be- 
ing again separated from you." 

The feelings of doubt and anxiety with regard to the 
reception he would meet, in making Iiis first call upon 
the gentlemen at the insurance office, were speedily dis- 
pelled and in the most agreeable manner. On being in- 
troduced to the president, Fred. De Peyster, Esq., he rose 
to meet him with both hands extended, and his counte- 
nance beaming with the kindest expressions, as if anxious 
only to do away with all apprehension of want of sym- 
patliy or failure to recognize the value of his services. 

With a voice fall of emotion he acknowledged the 
receipt of his letter, and expressed his full appreciation 
and respect for the feelings it betrayed. He thanked 
him for what he had done for the company, and, al- 
though not authorized to speak definitely of pecuniary 
remuneration, assured him it would be awarded to him. 
The sincerity with which my father assured him, in re- 
ply, of the gratification afforded liim by this friendly re- 
ception will not be doubted, and the sense of relief he 
experienced was soon greatly enhanced by the congratu- 
lations he received from leading members of the mer- 
cantile community — strangers as well as friends — wdio 
complimented him upon the success he had achieved. 
Several of the stockholders of the insurance company ex- 
pressed their sense of the obligation they w^ere under to 



OBJECTIONS TO HIS CHARGES. 221 

himj and an old and liigblj respected inercliant,"^ who 
had retired from business with an ample fortune, said 
to him, after the exchange of customary salutations, 
" You have done well for the oflSce. You have raised 
the value of its stock ten per cent. They cannot give 
you less than $10,000.'' 

His mind being relieved by such abundant evidence 
of appreciation of his services, he took advantage of the 
time w^hile the ship was unloading to spend a w^eek with 
his family in Lancaster, Mass. 

On his return he learned that objection was made to 
liis charge of ten per cent, on the net proceeds of 
freights, wliich he considered to be no more than a just 
proportion for the extra services rendered ; since, inde- 
pendently of obtaining the restoration of the ship in the 
manner related, he had procured the freights and ne- 
gotiated all the business without the aid of a broker. 
And when sometimes compelled to employ an agent to 
collect the amount rather than detain the ship, the 
commission paid for such services was not charged to 
account of the ow^ners. Besides, had the graduation of 
his emoluments been made with any reference to what 
they w^ould have been but for the seizure, they would 
have much exceeded the ten per cent, charge. 

These points were urged upon the gentlemen inter- 
ested, but were of no avail. Mr. Astor being in Eu- 
rope, his agent, had lie been disposed to act liberally, 
would hardly have dared to be less exacting than the 
underwriters, and hence recourse was had to arbitration, 
the result of which w^as a deduction of two and a half 
per cent, on jiis charge. 

* Benjamin Bailey, Esq. 



222 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

With this decision lie felt that he had abundant cause 
for dissatisfaction. But trusting to the repeated (though 
unofficial) assurances of President De Peyster, of pecun- 
iary remuneration, he refrained from manifesting it, and, 
having submitted to the decision of the arbitrators, he 
left the city for his home, not doubting that the prom- 
ised remuneration would be awarded him. 

A month passed, however, without a line from the 
office of the JSTational Insurance Company, and so a sec- 
ond month, when he could no longer doubt that no fur- 
ther action on their part was intended. Indignant at 
such treatment, and mortified at being thus duped, he 
determined, at least, to give expression to the feelings 
excited by their conduct. 

Accordingly, under date of Lancaster, December 22, 
1820, he addressed a letter to the president of the Na- 
tional Insurance Oompanj^, in which he referred to his 
communication of the 5tli of October previous, enumerat- 
ing the unusual services he had rendered the company, in 
the recovery and successful employment of the Beaver^ 
and further remarked that, if he had condescended to 
make invidious comparisons, he could have proved that 
what they considered to be an extra commission bore 
no proportion to the extra earnings of the Beaver over 
every other vessel then on the Peruvian coast, and this 
less from a concurrence of favorable circumstances than 
from his superior management. 

He reminded him of his promise of remuneration, and 
of its being repeated at a subsequent interview ; which 
promise he was now forced to believe was made with 
the express design of throwing him off his guard, in or- 



MEANNESS OF THE UNDERWRITERS. 223 

der the better to deceive bim ; and tbat the success at- 
tending it bad been doubtless gratifying to all who 
shared the two and a half per cent, thus saved to the 
company. The letter closed with the remark that, 

*'Had I conducted your business with as Uttle regard to the ob- 
servance of the rule of * doing unto others as we would that they 
should do unto us ' as has been observed in this instance towards 
me, the result of the Beaver's voyage would have been very differ- 
ent from what it is." 

To this letter he never received a repl3\ 
^ It is only proper to add the following extract from 
my father's narrative : 

*'It would be doing injustice to the venerable and respectable 
president of the company not to acknowledge that, although of ne- 
cessity he was the person to be officially addressed, I believe him to 
have been incapable of a mean or dishonorable act, and that when 
he made the promise alluded to he sincerely believed the directors 
would confirm it, as he knew they ought. Two of the directors ex- 
pressed to me their disapproval of the curtailment of my commis- 
sion, and a third said to me that he felt shame at being one of an 
association capable of such dishonorable conduct. But there was 
one individual among the directors whose great wealth gave him a 
preponderating influence in the affairs of the office. The greater 
deference paid to his opinions was very perceptible, and it is prob- 
able that the president, taking it for granted that a handsome com- 
pensation could not honorably be withheld, had the temerity to as- 
sure me of it before consulting with him, and thus caused the de- 
feat of his intention." 

More than sixty years have passed since the occur- 
rence of the above transactions, and all the parties to it 
have long since departed from their earthly labors. 

At this distance of time there can be no impropriety 
in giving the names of the individuals referred to. 



224 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

The influential director by whom tlie president was 
overruled was the Honorable Philip Hone, and the one 
who expressed his sense of shame at the action of the 
company was Gardner Howland, Esq. 

As an interesting episode, and as exhibiting a phase 
of my father's character of which there is no hint in liis 
narrative, I may here appropriately introduce an extract 
from one of his letters to my mother, written from New 
York under date of December 21, 1821, just one year 
after the time of the occnrrences just narrated. 

Mr. Astor had then returned from Europe, and my 
father's business w^as with him, but, as will be $een, he 
postponed the interview in order to attend the ordina- 
tion of the first Unitarian minister in New York, an 
event the importance of which (whether for good or 
evil) in the minds of the religious world at that day 
few now living can recall, and no one can estimate by 
any criterion now in existence. 

*'New York, December 21, 1821. 
*'I wrote you a hasty line on the morning of my arrival here, and 
then mentioned to you that it was the day on which Mr. Ware was 
to be ordained, but doubted whether I should attend. As the day 
was rainy, however, I concluded the house would not be crowded; 
there was no immediate necessity of seeing Mr. Astor, and the or- 
dination of the first Unitarian minister in New York might prove 
an epoch in the history of the Church, the retrospect of which (when 
error and bigotry shall be abolished by the light of reason and truth, 
of which this may be considered the dawn) will be viewed with great 
satisfaction and complacency, particularly by those who have main- 
tained it in spite of popular clamor. These considerations deter- 
mined me to attend the ordination, where I was exceedingly grati- 
fied in witnessing the most solemn, sublime, and affecting services, 
such as were strikingly calculated to contrast the nothingness and 



ORDINATION OF MR. WARE. 225 

imbecility of earthly pursuits with those profoundly grand and sub- 
lime ones which have God and Eternity for their object. The house, 
though small, was not more than two thirds filled. This was partly 
owing to the weather, but probably more to the apprehension of be- 
ing contaminated. Alas! they are ignorant of what they have lost. 
The services were opened by an anthem on a well-toned organ, ac- 
companied by a select choir, which was very good. The introduc- 
tory prayer by Mr. Taylor vv^as succeeded by a hymn from the so- 
ciety's collection. The sermon by Dr. Ware, from Acts xxviii. 22, 
was everything that would be expected from that distinguished 
scholar, evincing a depth of erudition, a profundity of thought, an 
independence of mind, and a consciousness of being guided alone by 
truth and reason, that carried persuasion and conviction along with 
it. Having progressed nearly through his sermon, he then addressed 
his son (the candidate) in a style so solemn and pathetic as exceed- 
ingly to affect the audience, and closed with recommending him to his 
people. The ordaining prayer by Dr. Harris was very w^ell, followed 
by a hymn said to have been composed by Mr. Pierpoint. The charge 
by Dr. Bancroft was very good, but its excellence was diminished by 
bad delivery. The right hand of fellowship by the brother of the 
candidate was excellent, and not less affecting than the address from 
the father; indeed, the speaker himself was so far overcome that he 
proceeded with difficulty, and the audience sympathized with him. 
A concluding prayer by Mr. Pierpoint, and a hymn to the tune of 
' Old Hundred ' (in which I heartily joined) closed the interesting 
services. This event has, as yet, been noticed by no other paper in 
the city than the Evening Post," 
10'^ 



CHAPTER XIV. 

1821-1860. 

Failure to Secure the Proceeds of liis Adventures. — Pursuit of 
Arizmendi to Hamburg and subsequently to Madrid. — Mr. 
Shaler Appointed Consul at Havana. — My Father Goes with 
him as Yice-Consul.— Death of Mr. Shaler.— Obtains an Office 
in Boston Custom-House. — Takes up his Residence with me, 
and Dies in my House at the Age of Eighty-seven. 

The voyage just narrated, in the Beaver^ was the last 
of a series of voyages to most parts of the habitable 
globe, during a period of twenty-four years, in various 
kinds of craft, from the boat of twenty-five tons to the 
Indiaman of a thousand tons, and, as will have been 
seen, on the most laborious and hazardous enterprises. 

A remarkable fact, which is well worthy of notice, is 
that during that long period, some portion of which 
was passed in the most sickly climates of the globe, my 
father never lost but three men of his crew — two by 
fever, after leaving Batavia, and one by a fall from the 
masthead. Although he was repeatedly at sea for five 
months on a single passage, he was never under the ne- 
cessity of putting his men on allowance of provisions or 
water; and to this circumstance, combined with guard- 
ing them from unnecessary fatigue and exposure, he 
was probably indebted for the happiness of escaping, 
not only that terrible scourge to seamen on long voy- 
ages, the scurvy, but almost all other kinds of sickness. 



ABADIA & ARIZMENDI. 227 

Some of his experiences subsequent to the voyage in 
the leaver are so connected with it that the story would 
be incomplete if they w^ere omitted, and I therefore give 
his own account of them in the following extract from 
his published narrative : 

*'ln less than a year after my return to New York in the Beaver 
I was destined again to see swept off the greater part of my hard 
earnings. A most unfortunate enterprise to Gibraltar;* incompe- 
tent, selfish, and careless agents; and, more than either, a most 
shameful abuse of the confidence I had placed in the commercial 
house at Lima, with which I bad been so long doing business 
(Abadia & Arizmendi), were the causes of these misfortunes. 

*' Soon after these reverses became known to my friends in Boston 
I met my highly esteemed friend, George Cabot, who, in his happy 
manner, remarked to me : ' You have cut a great deal of hay, but 
you have got it in very badly.' 

** Alas ! I felt most sensibly that it was too true. 

**The information of the revolution in Peru, of the consequent 
confusion in the commerce of Lima, of the breaking-up of the house 
of Abadia & Arizmendi, and of the escape of the latter with a large 
amount in silver in an American brig for Manilla, was received here 
not many months after my arrival. 

*' During the vice-regal government no stranger of respectability 
ever visited Lima without enjoying the hospitality of Don Pedro 
Abadia. He was eminently hospitable, urbane, and friendly; but 
although of superior education and extensive intercourse with man- 
kind, he was bigoted and priest-ridden. His talents and education 
and the extraneous circumstances of his being agent at Lima of the 
Philippine Company, and of his brother's being one of the cabinet 
of King Ferdinand, all combined to give him an influence with the 
viceroy and cabildo unsurpassed by any other individual in the 
kingdom. This influence was often exerted for my advantage, or 
rather for that of the owners of the Beaver, which advantage was 
reciprocal, as it enabled me to throw into the hands of his house 

* This refers to the voyage of the ship DrotUngeriy which he had 
despatched for Gibraltar from Guayaquil. 



228 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

many valuable consignments. It was Abadia who gave to tlie house 
the character of respectability it possessed, and this was such as to 
inspire a degree of confidence which secured to it almost exclusively 
the foreign business of the place. 

* ' Don Jose de Arizmendi was the active man of the house— a man 
who possessed the capacity of accomplishing much and varied busi- 
ness with a degree of despatch and skill very rarely seen among his 
countrymen. While present with him he would conduct the busi- 
ness with which he was charged on fair, honorable, and liberal 
principles. By this semblance of honesty I was deceived, and was 
induced to confide in the house to an extent which I discovered, 
when too late, was entirely unmerited, and which was attended with 
ruinous consequences. 

" It was late in my transactions with the house before I learned 
the peculiarity of the connection of the partners. Abadia's relation 
to the Philippine Company did not admit of his engaging in a pri- 
vate mercantile house ; hence, while a sharer in its advantages, he 
was exempt from its responsibilities; and hence all the accounts 
and business documents were signed exclusively by Arizmendi. Had 
these facts been known, as they should have been, it would have 
tended greatly to diminish the general confidence in the house. 

*'Late in the summer of 1823 mention was made in one of the Bos- 
ton papers of the arrival of Senor Arizmendi at Hamburg, in the 
Eoscoe, of Salem, freighted with a rich cargo for his account from 
Manilla. As I had no doubt that this was my quondam friend, I 
flattered myself that by starting immediately I might reach Ham- 
burg before he left. Accordingly, in forty-eight hours aftsx receiv- 
ing the information I was on my way to New York; and in thirty 
days more I arrived at Hamburg via Liverpool, London, Harwich, 
and Cuxhaven. But I had the mortification to find that my labor 
was in vain. 

** Arizmendi had landed at Teneriffe, and the cargo of the Boscoe^ 
yet unsold, was so well covered in the name of a Seiior Zavaleta, a 
former clerk of Arizmendi, who swore the property belonged exclu- 
sively to himself, that it could not be touched. 

*' After passing four days at Hamburg, and, with the aid of one of 
the most intelligent merchants of that city, being unable to effect 
anything, I set out on my return by the san>e route I had come. 



LETTER TO ABADIA. 229 

FortuDate]y I arrived at Liverpool just as the packet I came in was 
hauling out of dock on her return, and, embarking, I arrived at New 
York on the seventy-third day after leaving there. 

*'The following year (1824) I learned that Senor Abadia had ar- 
rived at St. Thomas, and immediately wrote him on the subject of 
my claim upon his house. The following copy of my letter will best 
explain the whole matter : 

/'Lancaster, Mass., September 21, 1824. 
"Don Pedro Abadia: 

''Bear Sir, — By a letter from our mutual friend, Mr. C , I learn 

that after many perils and some pecuniary embarrassment you have 
arrived safe at St. Thomas. On this event permit me to offer you 
my most hearty congratulations. It was reported last year that you 
had arrived at Porto Rico, and knowing that you possessed a coffee 
plantation there I thought this very probable, and directed several 
letters to you there, some one of which you may have received. 
These letters were written with the hope of inducing you to use 
some effort or point out some means by which the confidence I 
placed in the honor and integrity of your house should not be pro- 
ductive of my ruin. Among various other items, you must be aware 
that a sum of $15,000, charged me in account, as shipped forme on 
board the Macedonian, and for which I hold duplicate acknowledg- 
ments of Arizmendi, was never shipped. I will not attempt to de- 
scribe my astonishment, when, after a great lapse of time, I received 
letters from Captain Smith informing me that I had been deceived, 
and that no property had been shipped with him, either for my ac- 
count or that of your house. Independent of other sums, this 
amount, with ^ve years' interest, will make an aggregate of upwards 
of $20,000, as one item now due me from your house. Consider, 
my dear sir, that this is the fruit of very hard labor in the most toil- 
some profession, and that on the possession or loss of it is dependent 
a life of ease and comfort with my family, or protracted absence, 
care, and toil for the rest of my life. 

" You informed Mr. C that Arizmendi saved about $300,000. 

I heard two years since of his arrival at Manilla with a large prop- 
erty ; that last year he had there chartered the brig Roscoe, and with 
this property had arrived at Hamburg. In forty-eight hours after 
receiving this information I was on my way to Liverpool, where I 



230 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

arrived early in October, and proceeded immediately to London, 
and caused inquiries to be made of the Spanish houses there if they 
knew anything of Arizmendi. They referred me to the London 
Times, of October 7 (only two days before my arrival), in which 
appeared the advertisement which I send to Mr. C , to be for- 
warded to you. This advertisement was sufficient to account for 
Arizmendi's not venturing up channel to accompany his property to 
Hamburg. I therefore proceeded to Hamburg, where I found an 
amount of sixty or seventy thousand dollars of the cargo of the 
Boscoe in possession of a Mr. Zavaleta, in whose name it had been 
shipped at Manilla, who had accompanied it, and who solemnly 
swore it belonged to him. Arizmendi had been landed at Teneriffe. 
I had then, and have now, no doubt that this property belonged to 
Arizmendi ; but, unfortunately, I could produce no proof of it, and 
therefore my efforts were of no avail. I wrote to a house at Tene- 
riffe, and received for answer that Arizmendi remained there only 
two or three days, and then embarked for the Continent. This is the 
last I have heard of his movements. He told Zavaleta he should 
assume some other name. In this case I do not see how you can dis- 
cover where he is or how he can learn that you are at St. Thomas. 

*'I presume from the tenor of your letter to Mr. C that you 

have no amount of property with you, and that not less on your 
own account than from a desire which I believe you to possess to 
do justice to your creditors, you will leave no effort untried to dis- 
cover the retreat of Arizmendi, and to get that property from him, 
which, while withheld from the creditors of the house, will, how- 
ever undeserved, be considered not less dishonorable to the name 
and character of Abadia than to that of Arizmendi. If there should 
be any such chance for the recovery of the property as would jus- 
tify the expense of my meeting you at St. Thomas and there taking 
your directions and power to settle with Arizmendi in Europe, I 
would not hesitate to embark on such an expedition; indeed, I 
would even proceed to Lima, if you had any property remaining 
there which there was a fair chance of recovering." 

. ** Whether this letter was ever received by Abadia I have not been 
informed. Scarcely two months after writing it I received informa- 
tion which could be depended on that Arizmendi was at his pater- 



PURSUIT OF ARIZMENDL 231 

nal residence at Zarauz, in Guipuscoa. I bad no hesitation, there- 
fore, in embarking in December, at New York, in a brig bound for 
Bordeaux. Arriving there in January, 1825, I proceeded ma Ba- 
yonne Passage and Yrun to St. Sebastian. From thence a messenger 
was sent to Zarauz, Avho soon returned with information that Ariz- 
mendi was at Madrid, and with the name of the street where he 
resided. Taking the diligence, I had the good-fortune to reach Ma- 
drid without being robbed. 

"The next day I succeeded, not without much difficulty, in find- 
ing the person of whom I had so long been in pursuit, and was 
actually once more in his presence. Had an apparition appeared to 
him he could not have exhibited greater evidence of astonishment 
and dismay; nor was it until the expiration of some minutes that he 
was able to converse rationally. Unfortunately it required but little 
conversation to ascertain that my efforts w^ould prove to be unavail- 
ing and that I could recover nothing. He had succeeded in obtain- 
ing what in Spanish law is termed a ' morotoria' which is a security 
against molestation of person or property by creditors for a certain 
period. His was for four years. He begged me not to press my 
demand, declared that he had the control of no property, and the 
wretchedly mean, dirty, and obscure lodgings he occupied would 
have sufficed to confirm the truth of such assertion if made by any 
but a very cunning man. But I had no faith in it, and therefore did 
not desist from the pursuit until satisfied by repeated conversations 
with him, and the best advice I could procure during a residence of 
a fortnight in Madrid, that there existed not a hope of obtaining 
anything. As some alleviation to my disappointment, so far as it 
tended to keep up hope, Arizmendi gave me a power of attorney for 
the recovery of a large amount of property alleged to be due him 
from sundry merchants in the United States. From a cursory ex- 
amination of these claims I was led to believe that a considerable sum 
might be recovered, and I therefore flattered myself that there existed 
some chance of indemnification for my trouble and perseverance. 

** Burying my disappointment in the oblivion which screened such 
a multitude of its predecessors, I passed the time very agreeably in 
Madrid in visiting the numerous objects of interest with which that 
city abounds. 

** The a-cfem?i^ Viceroy of Peru, Don Joaquin de la Pezuela, hear- 



232 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

ing of my being in the city, sent a messenger to me with an invita- 
tion to his house, where he received me with the cordiality of an old 
friend. He inquired how my various mercantile operations had re- 
sulted, and evinced an interest in my affairs which was as pleasing 
as it was unexpected. His inquiries for Captain Biddle and his ex- 
pressions of friendship for him were made with an earnestness of 
manner which left no doubt of the esteem and regard he cherished 
for that distinguished officer. To the hospitality of our worthy 
minister, Mr. Nelson, and to that of the family of Mr. Eich, I was in- 
debted for some of the most agreeable social hours I passed at Madrid. 

** Taking leave of my kind friends in Madrid, I returned to Bor- 
deaux, and learning, on arriving there, that no opportunity for the 
United States would offer for some weeks, I took the diligence for 
Paris, where, after passing a week, I proceeded to Havre, and took 
passage in the Edward Quesnel for New York, and arrived there in 
April, 1825. 

** The agency for the collection of another's debts is an unaccept- 
able service, and especially so when they are of a description suscep- 
tible of controversy ; but in this instance there existed more than the 
usual inducement, for I hoped thus to cancel the debt due me. Up- 
wards of $100,000 were claimed of a Boston merchant,* the justice 
of which he denied, and refused to pay any part of it. A demand 
on a merchant of Baltimore for a much less amount was equally 
unsuccessful. The only debt acknowledged by the signature of the 
debtor was that of an old and intimate friend, f who could ill spare 
the money, and from whom it was very painful to me to exact it; 
but forbearance would have been a dereliction of duty, and would 
have been no otherwise serviceable to him than to defer the time of 
payment. Accordingly I recovered from him an amount about 
equal to one fourth of that due me from Arizmendi. 

* * When convinced that nothing more could be recovered under 
the power of attorney, I wrote to Arizmendi under his assumed name 
of Don Fausto Corral, as agreed on, to this effect, assuring him of 
my conviction that he would never obtain anything through the in- 
termediation of an agent, and that the only course which presented 
any prospect of success was to come to this country and prosecute 

* John Eilery. f Samuel Curson. 



ARIZMENDI m BOSTON. 233 

the business in person. This, however, I did not believe he would 
do on account of the large demands against his house which were 
held here. 

''Nearly two years elapsed after writing this letter, during which 
I heard nothing from or of him, when, suddenly and without any pre- 
vious intimation to any one, he made his appearance in Boston, accom- 
panied by a nephew, who, like himself, spoke no other than the Span- 
ish language. They were in very obscure and ordinary lodgings, 
kept by a foreigner, which circumstance, combined with the fact that 
they brought no letters, was evidence of their wish for concealment. 

*'I now felt a security and consequent exultation in the recovery 
of my property which I had not before experienced; indeed, I per- 
ceived no way in which it could be eluded. But man's shortsight- 
edness is proverbial, and scarce a day passes that it is not made self- 
evident. As Arizmendi was indebted $10,000 to myself and Mr. 
Carrington, of Providence, jointly, for short freight on a ship be- 
longing to us equally, I did not imagine that any mischief could 
arise from my notifying him of Arizmendi's arrival, though the re- 
sult clearly proved that the information had better been delayed. 
With ill-judged impetuosity he sent the papers proving the debt to 
a lawyer in Boston, with directions to institute a suit, notifying me 
at the same time of his having done so. Perceiving at once the mis- 
chief that would result from precipitate action, I went to the lawyer 
and persuaded him to wait a week, with the view of giving Ariz- 
mendi time to ascertain the prospect of his recovering the property 
of which he was in pursuit. This engagement was not adhered to; 
the writ was issued, and, for want of bail, he was imprisoned, thus 
depriving him of the power of making the collections on which 
mainly depended the chance of our obtaining our payment. It was 
literally destroying the bird that w^as destined to lay the golden egg. 

** This error being manifest, one of the partners of the Providence 
house came on, and, in the hope of retrieving it, w^e united in an act 
which only made matters worse, that of releasing him on his prom- 
ise of making a settlement, for it soon became evident that his only 
object was to secure his liberty, and that he had no intention of ful- 
filling his engagement. On being satisfied of this a new suit was 
instituted; but before the writ could be served on him he managed 
to escape, by the aid of a Boston merchant, v/ho enabled him to 



234 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

elude the vigilance of the officer charged with his arrest, concealed 
him until a vessel for St. Thomas v^as ready to sail, and then caused 
him to be conveyed on board. 

** In judging of actions we often err, and are guilty of injustice to 
the individual v^'^hose motives we undertake to scan, but in this case 
there can be no mistake. As there existed no personal animosity 
towards me on the part of this merchant, he could only have been 
actuated by motives of sordid interest. Arizmendi's principal ob- 
ject in coming to Boston was to collect a debt of upwards of $100,000, 
alleged to be due him from this man. 

*'0n the presumption that it was desirable for him to escape the 
payment of this debt, or even to avert a troublesome course of liti- 
gation, nothing could possibly have been more opportune than the 
coincidence of circumstances which enabled him to become the con- 
fidant, adviser, and benefactor of Arizmendi; ostensibly to screen 
him from the rigors of a prison, but really to rid himself of the ne- 
cessity of paying his debt; for, once away, he knew there was a 
moral certainty he would not return to prosecute the claim in per- 
son, and it was evident it could not be done by an agent except at 
the risk of the property's being trusteed. But every single act of a 
man's life, when seen from the right point of view, is found to be in 
harmony with his whole character. 

'*It was now evident that I must relinquish all hope of ever re- 
covering any portion of this debt, a debt so considerable that its loss 
was productive of lifelong inconvenience; a debt for the recovery of 
which I had made two voyages to Europe, had induced my debtor 
to come to this country, and, when apparently on the point of secur- 
ing payment, been compelled, by the blundering mismanagement of 
one man and rascality of another, to see the opportunity defeated." 

It seemed, indeed, a cruel and inglorious termination 
of the series of enterprises so ably planned and energet- 
ically prosecuted to be thus deprived of their legitimate 
results, and the burden was the more grievous as he no 
longer possessed the youthful vigor and elasticity which 
looks only to the future, forgetful of past disappoint- 
ments. 



VICE-CONSUL AT HAVANA. 235 

His habits had always been simple, and no man could 
be more averse to any ostentatious display of wealth 
than he. But he w^as generous by nature, and could 
not restrict himself in any expenditure demanded for 
the comfort of his family, the education of his children, 
the claims of friendship, or the exercise of a generous 
hospitality. He had sought money as a means to these 
ends, and their indulgence had become too strongly 
confirmed by habit to be abandoned at the age of fifty. 
But he felt the imprudence, at that age, of exposing him- 
self and the remnants of fortune he had secured to fur- 
ther risks of such nature as might be justifiable with a 
younger man. 

He had kept up an uninterrupted correspondence 
with his old friend Shaler during his long residence at 
Algiers as consul-general of the United States, and kept 
alive the warm friendship begun in their early man- 
hood. In 1828 Mr. Shaler received the appointment of 
consul at Havana, and immediately invited my father to 
accompany him as vice-consul, sharing equally the emol- 
uments of the office. These were at that time depend- 
ent on fees from American shipping, and although our 
commerce with that port was then so large that the of- 
fice was worth from $7000 to $10,000 a year, and, next 
to Liverpool, the most valuable in the gift of the presi- 
dent, yet, until Mr. Shaler's appointment, the United 
States had only been represented by a commercial agent. 

At this time, also, Mr. Shaler purchased of my father 
the estate at Lancaster which had been his home ever 
since his marriage in 1804, and placed his widowed sis- 
ter, Mrs. Stilwell, with her family, in charge of it, while 



236 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

he went with iny father and mother to Havana and (be- 
ing a bachelor) resided with them there until the melan- 
choly occurrence of his death from cholera in 1833. 
The disease raged fearfully there at the time, and up- 
wards of eight hundred deaths occurred on the day that 
Mr. Shaler died. He was first attacked at five p.m., and 
died next day at seven a.m. The dead were carried off 
in carts and no funeral rites allowed, and it was only by 
an energetic appeal to tlie captain-general that my fath- 
er got a permit to enclose the remains of his old friend 
in a coffin and accompany it as a solitary mourner to the 
foreigners' burying-ground at Chorero, five miles west 
of the city, on the sea-shore, where he saw it interred, 
and subsequently placed over the spot a massive stone 
monument bearing a suitable inscription. 

The American merchants in Havana immediately 
united in a unanimous petition that my father should be 
appointed to the consulate, the essential duties of whicli 
he had performed for five years in so satisfactory a man- 
ner as to elicit a voluntary and highly complimentary ex- 
pression of satisfaction from the Treasurj' Department at 
Washington. Memorials of similar purport were also 
sent to Washington by the merchants of ISTew York, 
Boston, Salem, and Portland who were engaged in the 
Havana trade. Daniel Webster and his fellow-senator, 
]N"athaniel Silsbee (my father's old friend), exerted them- 
selves actively in his behalf. But the doctrine that 
"to the victors belong the spoils "had then just been, 
for the first time, promulgated by Secretary Marcy, 
and my father was one of the earliest to suffer by its 
execution. The memory of his vigorous denunciation 



PROFITS AND LOSSES. 237 

of the principle, as subversive of all honest administra- 
tion, gives me a lively sense of the satisfaction he would 
have felt could he have foreseen that it would receive 
its death-blow at the hands of his kinsman, the present 
President of the United States. 

Though my father was never an active politician, he 
was always a stanch whig, and that fact was suflScient 
cause for removal. The place was given to Mr. Nicho- 
las P. Trist, a young Virginia lawyer who had been the 
private secretary of President Jackson. He was a gen- 
tlemanly and very intelligent man, but entirely inexperi- 
enced in commercial and maritime affairs, and had ac- 
cepted the office in the full expectation that my father 
would be glad to remain and wield the laboring oar. 
This, however, he positively declined, though offered the 
same terms on which he had been associated with Mr. 
Shaler, and he returned to the United States as soon as 
Mr. Trist had assumed the duties of the office. 

In the final chapter of his published narrative my 
father gives a resume of the profits and losses of his 
various adventures, and concludes as follows : 

*'Oii making an estimate of my losses for the twenty years be- 
tween 1805 and 1825, 1 find their aggregate amount to exceed $200,000, 
although I never possessed at any one time a sum exceeding $80,000. 
Under such losses I have been supported by the consoling reflection 
that they have been exclusively my own, and that it is not in the 
power of any individual to say, with truth, that I have ever injured 
him to the amount of a dollar. With a small annual sum from the 
Neapolitan indemnity I have been able to support myself till this 
was on the point of ceasing, by the cancelling of that debt, w^hen I 
w-as so fortunate as to obtain a^ oflSce in the Boston Custom-House, 
the duties of which I hope to perform faithfully and in peace during 



238 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

the few remaining years, or months, or days which may be allotted 
me on earth." 

lie continued to hold tliis office for some years, but 
was deposed by a new administration, and, in 1845, 
removed w^ith my mother to my home in Burlington, 
N". J., and continued to reside w^ith me till the end of his 
life. My mother died in Burlington in 1850. In 1854, 
my father removed with me to Massachusetts, and died 
in my house in Dan vers, November 23, 1860, at the age 
of eighty-seven. 

From the many obituary notices of my father which 
appeared in Boston, Salem, New York, and elsewhere, 
I select the following, from the pen of Hon. George S. 
Hillard, as comprising the fullest and most discrimina- 
ting statement of the peculiar combination of elements 
which formed his character. It appeared in the Boston 
Courier of December 8, 1860 : 

*'THE LATE EICIIAKD J. CLEVELAND. 

'* In announcing, a few daj^s since, the death of this venerable and 
excellent man, we promised to pay some more extended tribute to 
his worth than we then did, and this promise we now propose to 
redeem. 

"He was born in Salem, December 19, 1773, and had thus nearly 
reached the great age of eighty-seven years when he died, having 
long survived most of his contemporaries, and moving among their 
children and grandchildren as one of the few survivors of a former 
generation. 

*'He was trained in the counting-house of the late E. H. Derby, 
Esq. , and, as was the case with so many energetic spirits at that time, 
he combined the duties and the knowledge of the merchant and tho 
navigator. ^ 

** His first voyage was in 1792, in company with the late Nathaniel 
Silsbee, who commanded thg brig. Mr. Silsbee was not twenty years 



OBITUARY NOTICE. 239 

of age ; his chief mate was about as old, and Mr. Cleveland, who was 
captain's clerk, was only nineteen. 

"The beginning, however, of that series of enterprises which 
formed the main work of his life, and in which he showed such re- 
markable qualities of mind and character, was in 1797, when, finding 
himself at Havre, and left at liberty by the unexpected abandonment 
of a voyage by the owner of a ship he had the charge of, he bought 
a little cutter of only thirty-eight tons, and sailed for the Isle of 
France with a crew of two men and a boy. . From that time till 
1804 he was navigating, at first alone, and afterwards in company 
with the late William Shaler, in all parts of the world, and achiev- 
ing triumphantly feats which experienced navigators regarded as 
impossibilities. 

"From 1804 to 1820 he was more or less engaged in enterprises 
which were marked with, the characteristics of almost unequalled 
boldness, combined with a power of execution which enabled him 
to carry them to a successful issue. The incidents of these event- 
ful years were detailed by him in a work, published in 1842, entitled 
'A Narrative of Voyages and Commercial Enterprises,' which 
passed through two editions in America and was republished in 
England. This work is written in a style of attractive simplicity, 
and no one can read it without admiration of the noble and gener- 
ous qualities which the unpretending narrative unconsciously re- 
veals. 

" He was a man of traits of character not often found in combina- 
tion. He had great boldness, resolution, and energy; inflexible 
courage and indomitable perseverance, but he was no less remarka- 
ble for refinement of feeling, purity of soul, and delicacy of percep- 
tion. A more perfect gentleman, alike in essence and manner, was 
never seen. His domestic affections were very strong; he had a 
genuine enjoyment of nature, and a love of reading which was a 
constant pleasure and resource alike in the busy and the unemployed 
moments of his life. 

"During his crowded years of activity and enterprise he made 
and lost much property, and more than once deemed himself, and 
had a right to deem himself, a rich man ; but the end of it was that 
he found himself in his old age a poor man. This was not owing, as 
might be surmised, to any reckless and extravagant habits induced 



240 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

by the ease with which independence had been won, for he was a man 
of very simple tastes and with no expensive wants. But he was ex- 
tremely generous, and this trait led him to aid, with profuse liberali- 
ty, all who had any claims upon his affection. And while in the 
planning of commercial enterprises he showed rare inventive quali- 
ties, and in the execution of them wonderful energy and persever- 
ance, he was somewhat deficient in those humbler qualities which 
enable men to keep and manage what they have earned; and no one 
need be told that the accumulation of wealth depends quite as much 
upon the latter class of gifts as the former. But this reverse of 
fortune served to bring out more and more the beauty of Captain 
Cleveland's character and give him new claims to the affection and 
esteem of his friends. It was gently, patiently, and heroically borne ; 
never a word of complaint was heard from his lips, never a bitter 
arraignment of the ways of Providence, never an envious fling at 
the prosperity of others. And the wise, kind, cheerful old man was 
happy to the end. His last years were passed in the family of his 
3^oungest son, soothed and gladdened by the most affectionate care. 
His decay was gradual, and he w^as released at last without suf- 
fering. 

''Captain Cleveland, among other traits, was remarkable for his 
strict temperance, although he grew up at a time when the usages of 
society made abstinence from intoxicating drinks a harder duty than 
now. During his whole life he never drank a glass of wine, or of 
any alcoholic liquor, or of porter, ale, or beer, and never used tobacco 
in any form. He ascribed his uniform good health to these temper- 
ate habits; but, wuth his usual simplicity of manner, he never took 
any moral airs upon himself on this account, but was accustomed to 
say, when he alluded to the subject at all, which was rarely, that 
the reason he did not drink wine was because he did not like the 
taste of it. " 

As I was but a little child at the time my father had 
concluded the last of his voyages, my early recollections 
of him have no connection with such characteristics as 
are naturally associated w^ith the conception of a daring 
adventurer. He never encouraged in his children the 



HIS DOMESTIC LIFE. 241 

ambition to emulate his own achievements, and, indeed, 
tliey were so rarely alhided to by him in conversation 
that the details given in his narrative were for the most 
part as new to me, at the time of its publication, as to 
the world at large. I remember him only as the coun- 
try gentleman, living at case in the beautiful home at 
Lancaster which was my birthplace, and so absorbed in 
the duties and interests of the daily life around him 
that no stranger would have suspected that the most 
active portion of his life had been spent in navigating 
the ocean. He had an ardent love of nature, and a 
keen perception of her attractive features, whether in 
their grandest or their most simple forms. He was such 
a lover of flowers that it w^as his constant custom, dur- 
ing their season, to carry a' pink or some other fragrant 
blossom in his mouth, and he would preserve a single 
one for a whole day, laying it beside his plate at meals 
and resuming it afterwards. He was an appreciative 
reader of the best literature of the day, and was in the 
constant habit of reading aloud to my mother, and dis- 
cussing with her the subjects which excited his interest. 

He exercised a generous hospitality, not in the form 
of ostentatious banquets or large assemblies, but by mak- 
ing his home attractive to his wide circle of friends, so that 
it was rare that some one or more of them was not his 
guest, and always unceremoniously, as one of the family. 

His neighbors and fellow-townsmen w^ere on terms of 
friendly social intercourse with him, and he was always 
active in promoting the best interests of the town, 
where his memory is still held in respect. 

The natural beauty of that lovely valley is still un- 
11 



242 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

changed. The Nashua winds its course through the 
rich meadows as of old ; the grand old elms, for which 
its valley is famous, still wave their gracefully droop- 
ing arms ; the rounded forms of Wachuset and Wata- 
toc, and the more distant and picturesque outline of the 
Grand Monadnoc are still pencilled against the evening 
sky; the seasons come and go in all their changing 
beauty as of yore ; but no one remains upon the stage 
who retains even a recollection of the actors whose 
presence gave life to the scene in the days of which I 
speak. 

I have elsewhere mentioned that my father's anxiety 
to secure for his children better advantages of educa- 
tion than were afforded by the country schools of the 
day led to the establishment at Lancaster of a classical 
school, the selection of the teachers of which was in- 
trusted to him, and the first of whom was Jared Sparks, 
the subsequent historian and President of Harvard Col- 
lege. The second was George B. Emerson, whose sub- 
sequent record as a teacher and as President of the Mas- 
sachusetts Board of Education has secured for him a po- 
sition of the highest order in the annals of education, 
and the third was the late Solomon P. Miles, afterwards 
principal of the English High School in Boston, who 
but for his premature death would doubtless have at- 
tained corresponding honors. Each of these eminent 
men began his career on leaving college by taking charge 
of the school established at Lancaster, and each of them 
has repeatedly and enthusiastically expressed to me his 
sense of the value to him, at that critical period- of his 
life, of the homelike influence, the warm personal friend- 



REMINISCENCES OF LANCASTER. 243 

ship, the genial social atmosphere, and the ready sym- 
pathy and counsel, with which his memory of my father 
and mother was associated. 

The existence of a school of such high character at- 
tracted to the town a number of families desirous of 
availing themselves of its advantages, and resulted in 
tlie attainment of such a standard of social and intel- 
lectual culture as few country towns at that day could 
boast. 

In Marvin's History of Lancaster, published in 1879, 
Miss Elizabeth Peabody communicates some very in- 
teresting reminiscences of those days. She was then a 
young lady, v/armly interested in the cause of education, 
to which her life has since been devoted, and was living 
in Lancaster, where her father was, for a time, settled as 
a physician. 

She alludes as follows to my father and mother: 

*' Captain Cleveland had retired on his fortune, gained in a suc- 
cessful mercantile career begun at Salem. He was a noble, original, 
heroic character, who, inspired by a love that was eventually crowned 
by a most happy marriage, worked with the enthusiasm and self- 
devotion of a knight of the days of chivalry to win a fortune for 
his bride elect, and with a kindred high sense of honor. In the 
course of his career he met and united in a bond of friendship, as 
exceptional as his love, with Mr. Shaler, who subsequently bought 
his residence. At his house there was every evening an assemblage 
of those who were interested in education, a subject in which Mrs. 
Cleveland was deeply absorbed, having herself educated her three 
boys, with the help in the last years of Messrs. Sparks, Emerson, and 
Miles, to all of whom her hospitable mansion was a home, and she 
their most respected and beloved counsellor. She had studied Rous- 
seau and Pestalozzi without losing her own originality. The even- 
ings at her house were the greatest inspiration to all these educators. 



244 VOYAGES OF A MERCHANT NAVIGATOR. 

There I met Colburn, and learned from liis own lips his idea of mak- 
ing children discover and make for themselves the rules of arith- 
metic. . . . 

''But it was not merely new methods of intellectual education 
that were discussed at these symposia at Mrs. Cleveland's, but the 
necessity and method of building up character on the Christian and 
heroic ideal of inspiring children with the power to educate them- 
selves. 

''When I think of those years of my life at Lancaster, it seems ar- 
rayed in all the glory of the ideal. The enthusiasm for study among 
the young people; the enthusiasm of educating in the teachers; the 
extraordinary beauty of nature; the classic music which Mrs. Cleve- 
land always played to her husband, who enjoyed it so much that 
she never allowed a visitor to interrupt it; Mr. Cleveland's unworld- 
ly nobility of character — all blend to make it an oasis in the desert 
of this 'work-day world.' Life has never seemed to me tame or 
uninteresting; but this period is glorified in my memory, not mere- 
ly by the subjective enthusiasm of my own youthful reason, but by 
the objective reality of so many rare individualities congregated to- 
gether.'* 

My own recollections of those golden days of my 
childhood and of the happy home in which they were 
passed is so vivid^ and the contrast is so great between 
the pure and wholesome social atmosphere which then 
surrounded me, and the heated and tainted air which 
is so widely prevalent to-day, that I find it hard to be- 
lieve that this can be the same w^orld in w^hich I then 
lived. 

I alone am left of those w^ho were nearest and dearest 
to him, and the home he so loved is no longer in ex- 
istence. His trials and disappointments, his courage 
and perseverance, his successes and failures, are only 
" Remembered as a tale that's told." 

As the last survivor of his family, I offer this tribute 



CONCLUSIOK 245 

of respect to his memory, in the faith that the record 
of such a life is worthy of preservation, and the hope 
that the footsteps he has left upon the sands of time 
may serve to give new heart to " Some forlorn and ship- 
wrecked brother." 



THE EKD. 



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SHORT'S NORTH AMERICANS OF ANTIQUITY. The 
North Americans of Antiquity. Their Origin, Migrations, and 

' Type of Civilization Considered. By John T. Short. Illus- 
trated. 8vo, Cloth, $3 00. 

SQUIER'S PERU. Peru: Incidents of Travel and Exploration 
in the Land of the Incas. By E. George Squiek, M. A., F.S.A., 
late U. S. Commissioner to Peru. With Illustrations. 8vo, 
Cloth, $5 00. 

BENJAMIN'S ART IN EUROPE. Contemporary Art in Europe. 
By S. G. W. Benjamin. Illustrated. 8vo, Cloth, $3 50 ; Half 
Calf, $5 75. 

BENJAMIN'S ART IN AMERICA. Art in America. By S. 
G. W. Benjamin. Illustrated. 8vo, Cloth, $4 00 ; Half Calf, 
$6 25. 

REBER'S history of ancient art. History of Ancient 
Art. By Dr. Franz von Reber. Revised by the Author. 
Translated and Augmented by Joseph Thacher Clarke. With 
310 Illustrations and a Glossary of Technical Terms. 8vo, Cloth, 
$3 50. 

GROTE'S history of GREECE. 12 vols., 12mo, Cloth, 
$18 00 ; Sheep, $22^ 80 ; IMf Calf, $39 00. 



3 Valuable Works for Public and Private Libraries, 

ADAMS'S MANUAL OF HISTORICAL LITERATURE. A 

Manual of Historical Literature. Comprising Brief Descriptions 
of the Most Important Histories in English, French, and Ger- 
man. By Professor C. K. Adams. 8vo, Cloth, $2 50. 

KINGLAKE'S CRIMEAN WAR. The Invasion of the Crimea: 
its Origin, and an Account of its Progress down to the Death 
of Lord Raglan. By Alexander William Kinglake. With 
Maps and Plans. Four Volumes now readj-. 12mo, Cloth, $2 00 
per vol. 

MAURY'S PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. The 

Physical Geography of the Sea, and its Meteorology. By M. F. 
Maury, LL.D. 8vo, Cloth, $4 00. 

IIALLAM'S LITERATURE. Introduction to the Literature of 
Europe during the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Cent- 
uries. By Henry IIallam. 2 vols., 8vo, Cloth, $4 00; Sheep, 

$5 00. 

HALLAM'S MIDDLE AGES. View of the State of Europe dur- 
ing the Middle Ages. By H. Hallam. 8vo, Cloth, $2 00; 
Sheep, $2 50. 

HALLAM'S CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND. 

The Constitutional History of England, from the Accession of 
Henry VII. to the Death of George II. By Henry Hallam. 
8vo, Cloth, $2 00; Sheep, $2 50. 

NEWCOMB'S ASTRONOMY. Popular Astronomy. By Simon 
Newcomb, LL.D. With 112 Engravings, and 5 Maps of the 
Stars. 8vo, Cloth, $2 50; School Edition, 12rao, Cloth, $1 30. 

VAN-LENNEP'S BIBLE LANDS. Bible Lands: their Modern 
Custom and Manners Illustrative of Scripture. By Henry J. 
Van-Lennep, D.D. 350 Engravings and 2 Colored Maps. 8vo, 
Cloth, $5 00 ; Sheep, $6 00 ; Half Morocco, $8 00. 

PRIME'S POTTERY AND PORCELAIN. Pottery and Porce- 
lain of All Times and Nations. With Tables of Factory and 
Artists' Marks, for the Use of Collectors. By William C. 
Prime, LL.D. Illustrated. 8vo, Cloth, Uncut Edges .jglid* Gilt 
Tops, $7 00; Half Calf, $9 25., 



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